Greetings from Hell


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Need to send a special message to that certain someone? Here are 32 ready-to-mail postcards selected from the four bestselling "Hell" books, featuring America's favorite rabbits. Two-color cartoons.




Postcards From Hell


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Postcards from Hell


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Postcards From Hell is a collection of ten short horror stories from Don Darrin, the author of Harmonyville. The stories visit the towns surrounding Harmonyville, and each has a unique aspect of horror. In the title story, Postcards From Hell, a man unknowingly makes a deal with a demon and the price might be too high. In Inheritance, a man inherits a house he was frightened of as a child. Was it all in his head or is something else at work there? In Lot Lizard, a new truck driver learns the ways of a truck stop and its local prostitute. Saving Time is about a loving husband who was known for always being late as a child. Now as an adult can he make it on time? In Rabid a family’s annual cabin trip becomes deadly, thanks to a research raccoon. In Gulls, a lonely simpleton spends his lunch with increasingly daring seagulls. In Bargain Buy, a man invites his friends to help him paint his new house that he got a great deal on. There may be a reason it was so cheap though. In The Red, a rural town has a secret lurking in the local forest. Nobody goes in The Red. In Nimbus, a small town starts to have strange happenings after a suspicious rain cloud arrives. In Seed, a man believes he’s been cursed after he wrongs a supposed witch. Postcards From Hell has something for everyone. Which story will haunt you?




Postcards from Hell


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Postcards From the Edge


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** THE NEW YORK TIMES-BESTSELLING CULT CLASSIC NOVEL ** ** In a new edition introduced by Stephen Fry ** ‘I don’t think you can even call this a drug. This is just a response to the conditions we live in.’ Suzanne Vale, formerly acclaimed actress, is in rehab, feeling like ‘something on the bottom of someone’s shoe, and not even someone interesting’. Immersed in the sometimes harrowing, often hilarious goings-on of the drug hospital and wondering how she’ll cope – and find work – back on the outside, she meets new patient Alex. Ambitious, good-looking in a Heathcliffish way and in the grip of a monumental addiction, he makes Suzanne realize that, however eccentric her life might seem, there’s always someone who’s even closer to the edge of reason. Carrie Fisher’s bestselling debut novel is an uproarious commentary on Hollywood – the home of success, sex and insecurity – and has become a beloved cult classic. ‘This novel, with its energy, bounce and generous delivery of a loud laugh on almost every page, stands as a declaration of war on two fronts: on normal and on unhappy’ STEPHEN FRY ‘A single woman’s answer to Nora Ephron’s Heartburn . . . the smart successor to Joan Didion’s Play It as It Lays’ Los Angeles Times ‘A cult classic . . . A wonderfully funny, brash and biting novel’ Washington Post 'A wickedly shrewd black-humor riff on the horrors of rehab and the hollows of Hollywood life' People 'Searingly funny' Vogue




13 Postcards from Hell


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Special Delivery...FROM HELL!Someone dies and wakes up in the afterlife...and it isn't the nice place, either...Despite having an exceptionally bad day, that unfortunate someone gets a perk: They can send a message to someone in the land of the living, anyone they want.What is their personal Hell like? What message would they send? Who would they send it to? Well, you don't have use your imagination for this little exercise; instead, you can see what thirteen fiendish, horror authors (along with the two editors) imagined. Cruel devils in their own right, you might just be surprised at what they wrote...




Postcards from the Grave


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& Quot;In May 1992, while Serb nationalist forces 'cleansed' the towns and villages of the Drina valley in eastern Bosnia of their formerly majority Muslim population - as part of Slobodan Milosevic's criminal attempt to carve an expanded Serbia from the successor states of the former Yugoslav federation - thousands of fleeing, desperate people converged on the small town of Srebrenica in search of refuge." "For many of them this would prove to be a fatal decision. Serb forces besieged the town for three years, undeterred even when it was proclaimed a 'UN Safe Area'. As more and more refugees fled to Srebrenica from the surrounding villages, conditions there became unbearable: near-starvation, daily death, degradation of civilized life. The victims themselves were caught up in the dialectic of violence. Finally, after three years of agony, and as those sent to protect them stood by, Srebrenica was destroyed. In just a few days in July 1995 Bosnian Serb forces murdered some 8,000 people." "Against all odds Emir Suljagic survived, while the lives of nearly every man he had ever known - and those of many women too - were wiped out. His haunted record of those terrible times offers a fitting monument to those who died."--Jacket.




Mr. Natural Postcard Book


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Housewives in Hell


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Postcards from Ed


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But hell, I do like to write letters. Much easier than writing books." And write letters Ed Abbey did. In his famous -- or infamous -- 45-year career, Abbey's cards and letters became as legendary as his books for their wit, vitriol, and ability to speak truth to power. Published here for the first time, the letters offer a fascinating, often hilarious glimpse into the mind of one of America's most iconoclastic and beloved authors. No subject was too banal, too arcane, or too deep for Abbey to expound on: sex, cheerleaders, Mormons, Aspen, and the Bond girls are covered as gleefully as Stegner, Dylan, Chomsky, Buddhism, and betrayal. Whether scolding an editor to simplify ("I've had to waste hours erasing that storm of fly-shit on the typescript") or skewering the chicken-hawk proponents of the war in Vietnam, Abbey's righteous indignation gives hope and inspiration to a generation that desperately needs both.