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- Leo Albright
Leo Albright

Dernière sortie
The Dark Road Home
Across the world, every town has a story it does not like to tell after dark. A road where drivers see someone standing in the mist. A bridge where people swear they heard footsteps behind them. A house where a stranger appeared at the door and should never have been invited inside. A cemetery where children once searched for something impossible. A computer screen, a hotel room, a railway line, a black car, a mirror, a warning sign, a voice on the phone.
Urban legends survive because they feel uncomfortably close to real life. The Dark Road Home is a chilling nonfiction exploration of thirty-five frightening urban legends from around the world, focusing on the stories that are often less familiar but no less disturbing. From phantom roads and haunted bridges to cursed objects, ghostly passengers, internet-age nightmares, schoolyard spirits, black-eyed visitors, strange vehicles, and figures seen only in the corner of the eye, Leo Albright examines the folklore that grows in cities, villages, highways, bedrooms, hospitals, and lonely places where fear begins to take shape.
This book does not treat urban legends as simple campfire tales. Instead, it looks at why these stories spread, what they reveal about the societies that tell them, and why certain fears return again and again under different names. The legends may change from country to country, but the warnings remain familiar: do not stop the car, do not look in the mirror, do not answer the door, do not follow the instructions, do not walk home alone.
Atmospheric, unsettling, and deeply rooted in modern folklore, The Dark Road Home is a journey through the stories people whisper when they believe there may be truth hidden beneath the legend. It is a book for readers drawn to haunted roads, vanishing figures, cursed places, old rumours, strange encounters, and the darker side of human storytelling. Some legends begin as lies. Some begin as warnings.
And some refuse to die.
Urban legends survive because they feel uncomfortably close to real life. The Dark Road Home is a chilling nonfiction exploration of thirty-five frightening urban legends from around the world, focusing on the stories that are often less familiar but no less disturbing. From phantom roads and haunted bridges to cursed objects, ghostly passengers, internet-age nightmares, schoolyard spirits, black-eyed visitors, strange vehicles, and figures seen only in the corner of the eye, Leo Albright examines the folklore that grows in cities, villages, highways, bedrooms, hospitals, and lonely places where fear begins to take shape.
This book does not treat urban legends as simple campfire tales. Instead, it looks at why these stories spread, what they reveal about the societies that tell them, and why certain fears return again and again under different names. The legends may change from country to country, but the warnings remain familiar: do not stop the car, do not look in the mirror, do not answer the door, do not follow the instructions, do not walk home alone.
Atmospheric, unsettling, and deeply rooted in modern folklore, The Dark Road Home is a journey through the stories people whisper when they believe there may be truth hidden beneath the legend. It is a book for readers drawn to haunted roads, vanishing figures, cursed places, old rumours, strange encounters, and the darker side of human storytelling. Some legends begin as lies. Some begin as warnings.
And some refuse to die.
Across the world, every town has a story it does not like to tell after dark. A road where drivers see someone standing in the mist. A bridge where people swear they heard footsteps behind them. A house where a stranger appeared at the door and should never have been invited inside. A cemetery where children once searched for something impossible. A computer screen, a hotel room, a railway line, a black car, a mirror, a warning sign, a voice on the phone.
Urban legends survive because they feel uncomfortably close to real life. The Dark Road Home is a chilling nonfiction exploration of thirty-five frightening urban legends from around the world, focusing on the stories that are often less familiar but no less disturbing. From phantom roads and haunted bridges to cursed objects, ghostly passengers, internet-age nightmares, schoolyard spirits, black-eyed visitors, strange vehicles, and figures seen only in the corner of the eye, Leo Albright examines the folklore that grows in cities, villages, highways, bedrooms, hospitals, and lonely places where fear begins to take shape.
This book does not treat urban legends as simple campfire tales. Instead, it looks at why these stories spread, what they reveal about the societies that tell them, and why certain fears return again and again under different names. The legends may change from country to country, but the warnings remain familiar: do not stop the car, do not look in the mirror, do not answer the door, do not follow the instructions, do not walk home alone.
Atmospheric, unsettling, and deeply rooted in modern folklore, The Dark Road Home is a journey through the stories people whisper when they believe there may be truth hidden beneath the legend. It is a book for readers drawn to haunted roads, vanishing figures, cursed places, old rumours, strange encounters, and the darker side of human storytelling. Some legends begin as lies. Some begin as warnings.
And some refuse to die.
Urban legends survive because they feel uncomfortably close to real life. The Dark Road Home is a chilling nonfiction exploration of thirty-five frightening urban legends from around the world, focusing on the stories that are often less familiar but no less disturbing. From phantom roads and haunted bridges to cursed objects, ghostly passengers, internet-age nightmares, schoolyard spirits, black-eyed visitors, strange vehicles, and figures seen only in the corner of the eye, Leo Albright examines the folklore that grows in cities, villages, highways, bedrooms, hospitals, and lonely places where fear begins to take shape.
This book does not treat urban legends as simple campfire tales. Instead, it looks at why these stories spread, what they reveal about the societies that tell them, and why certain fears return again and again under different names. The legends may change from country to country, but the warnings remain familiar: do not stop the car, do not look in the mirror, do not answer the door, do not follow the instructions, do not walk home alone.
Atmospheric, unsettling, and deeply rooted in modern folklore, The Dark Road Home is a journey through the stories people whisper when they believe there may be truth hidden beneath the legend. It is a book for readers drawn to haunted roads, vanishing figures, cursed places, old rumours, strange encounters, and the darker side of human storytelling. Some legends begin as lies. Some begin as warnings.
And some refuse to die.
