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  IL - Explosion (1992)
Posted by: WMASG - 12-18-2025, 02:53 PM - Replies (1)

   


“I wasn’t a baby when the bomb dropped,” said Samuel.  “I was almost twelve.”  Ralph and he were in their favorite den, known as ‘Lhasa’, because it was forbidden to all the others.  It was a dense thicket of acacia growing courageously along the highest boundary of their little world.  This boundary was the only one the boys were never tempted to transgress, being the edge of a vast, precipitous escarpment.  You would have to be able to walk on air to get to the far side of the valley below.  Just to peer over that edge made you dizzy, so clear-cut and final was it. 
The valley itself was nicknamed “Hell” because it was “the last place you wanted to end up in”.  The tiny community, demoralized by fear and insecurity, had spent long hours arguing over the location and distances of the other limits to their isolated domain, but this border fixed itself. 
Recalling certain events of the past associated with it, Samuel shuddered, and was glad to have Ralph present beside him.  They came to the thicket whenever they wanted to be alone and talk.  Once you were in, you could not be seen, unless a spy were able to creep up without breaking a twig or rustling the branches.  They had practiced doing it many times for fun, but hardly ever had either of them succeeded in surprising the other.  In the very center of the thicket was a completely open patch of lush sward.  There they would sit, or lie gazing up at the sky above them and gossiping about themselves or their companions.  This place was sacred, like Tibet’s own mysterious heart. 
As you stared upwards and outwards, you could imagine an enormous celestial tree spreading to infinity above and around you.  Its trunk was a distant mountain, far away across the mighty Rift.  Its branches were the horizontal clouds, in which there now hung a full, ripe, tropical moon, a beautiful fruit just ready for the picking. 
Ralph sat down on a wide, bench-like boulder and watched Samuel, who stood gazing up at the sky.  Suddenly Samuel asked, “Do you remember mangoes?”  He stretched out his arms as if to pluck down the moon and bite into it with those gleaming teeth and fleshy lips of his.  “I wish they would grow again,” he sighed.

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  The Lost Boyz (2011)
Posted by: WMASG - 12-18-2025, 02:46 PM - Replies (1)

   


A rare first-hand account of disaffected youth. Contains countless lessons for young people who might be attracted to crime (and anyone involved with them socially or professionally).

Aged just fourteen and using the name ‘Sevens’, the author went from being a bullied child to leader of the Warriorz, a group of London street kids involved in graffiti-tagging and other crimes including a series of violent encounters.

Eventually given a substantial custodial sentence for an attack with a meat cleaver on the London Underground, Justin Rollins became determined to steer other young people away from such a life.

The Lost Boyz tells the story of his descent into a form of madness in which self-destruction, anger, wanton behaviour and fear lie at the core. Not before has a book taken the reader so far inside the minds of troubled youths as the author and his companions—some of whom did not survive or also ended up in prison—gradually realise that there is no easy escape from their chaotic lifestyle. Their need to gain respect from and stay credible with each other stems from offending, alienation, living on the margins of society and crazy behaviour—all of which serve as barriers to rejoining the normal world and going straight.

The book contains countless lessons for young people who might be attracted to crime just as it does for anyone interested in youth offending, gang culture, criminology, mental health issues or that period of modern English social history when the unofficial decoration of walls, fences, trains and buses became a telling symbol of disaffected youth. 

Quote: 'Reading this book is a little like living a nightmare, but you can always close the book, Justin Rollins actually lived this life; what a nightmarish time': Graphotism

'This book confirms that the effects of childhood trauma can take their toll on some individuals, depending on how they’re dealt with – and it also confirms that the age-old effect of peer pressure can really make young people do some crazy stuff... but there are some real dark moments in there so be prepared': Keep the Faith

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  Boys in the Valley (2021)
Posted by: WMASG - 12-18-2025, 02:31 PM - Replies (1)

   

The Exorcist meets Lord of the Flies, by way of Midnight Mass, in Boys in the Valley, a brilliant coming-of-age tale from award-winning author Philip Fracassi.

St. Vincent's Orphanage for Boys.

Turn of the century, in a remote valley in Pennsylvania.

Here, under the watchful eyes of several priests, thirty boys work, learn, and worship. Peter Barlow, orphaned as a child by a gruesome murder, has made a new life here. As he approaches adulthood, he has friends, a future... a family.

Then, late one stormy night, a group of men arrive at their door, one of whom is badly wounded, occult symbols carved into his flesh. His death releases an ancient evil that spreads like sickness, infecting St. Vincent's and the children within. Soon, boys begin acting differently, forming groups. Taking sides.

Others turn up dead.

Now Peter and those dear to him must choose sides of their own, each of them knowing their lives ― and perhaps their eternal souls ― are at risk.

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  Wild Spaces (2023)
Posted by: WMASG - 12-18-2025, 02:26 PM - Replies (1)

   


Robert R. McCammon’s Boy’s Life meets H. P. Lovecraft in Wild Spaces, a foreboding, sensual coming-of-age story in which the corrosive nature of family secrets and toxic relatives assume eldritch proportions.

An eleven-year-old boy lives an idyllic childhood exploring the remote coastal plains and wetlands of South Carolina alongside his parents and his dog Teach. But when the boy’s eerie and estranged grandfather shows up one day with no warning, cracks begin to form as hidden secrets resurface that his parents refuse to explain.
The longer his grandfather outstays his welcome and the greater the tension between the adults grows, the more the boy feels something within him changing — physically — into something his grandfather welcomes and his mother fears. Something abyssal. Something monstrous.
A foreboding coming-of-age story as rich and humid as the Carolina coast in which the corrosive nature of family secrets and toxic relatives assume eldritch proportions. 

Quote:Wild Spaces is an eldritch coming-of-age story done right. It's lyrical, emotionally complex, creepy, and there's not a drop of poisonous nostalgia. I loved it and I can't stop thinking about it.”
― Paul Tremblay, author of The Cabin at the End of the World and The Pallbearers Club   “Atmospheric, humming with menace, heartbreaking, beautifully written.”
― Glen Hirshberg, author of Infinity Dreams and the Motherless Children trilogy

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  Vladimir - Short Stories (1995)
Posted by: WMASG - 12-18-2025, 02:18 PM - Replies (1)

   


Ivanov, a poor geography graduate, is engaged as a tutor to David, the young son of an emigre mother and German father living in Berlin in 1930. The story continues as he accompanies his ward to the seaside for a summer vacation... 

"The Stories of Vladimir Nabokov" (in some British editions, The Collected Stories) is a posthumous collection of every known short story that Vladimir Nabokov ever wrote, with the exception of "The Enchanter". The thirteen stories not previously published in English are translated by the author's son, Dmitri Nabokov.

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