SOLDES

Jusqu'à -70% sur une sélection d'articles*

The Hush Ledger: Three Seconds Owed in a Quiet Town

Par : Nolan Pierce
Offrir maintenant
Ou planifier dans votre panier
Disponible dans votre compte client Decitre ou Furet du Nord dès validation de votre commande. Le format ePub protégé est :
  • Compatible avec une lecture sur My Vivlio (smartphone, tablette, ordinateur)
  • Compatible avec une lecture sur liseuses Vivlio
  • Pour les liseuses autres que Vivlio, vous devez utiliser le logiciel Adobe Digital Edition. Non compatible avec la lecture sur les liseuses Kindle, Remarkable et Sony
  • Non compatible avec un achat hors France métropolitaine
Logo Vivlio, qui est-ce ?

Notre partenaire de plateforme de lecture numérique où vous retrouverez l'ensemble de vos ebooks gratuitement

Pour en savoir plus sur nos ebooks, consultez notre aide en ligne ici
C'est si simple ! Lisez votre ebook avec l'app Vivlio sur votre tablette, mobile ou ordinateur :
Google PlayApp Store
  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8231921270
  • EAN9798231921270
  • Date de parution20/09/2025
  • Protection num.Adobe DRM
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurWalzone Press

Résumé

The Hush Ledger - Three Seconds Owed in a Quiet Town is a slow-burn thriller and literary horror novel set in a prairie town where a radio tower learned a terrible habit: keeping three seconds of unfinished speech. Broadcast engineer Evelyn Rae Kline arrives to audit KEVA and finds not a haunting but a ledger-an engineering accident that banks sentences until the right mouth can finish them. What follows is small town horror rendered with procedural clarity: No Stream.
No Crowd. No Show. Each "paid" line carries a price measured in the human ear-narrow bands first, then a wide swath of speech itself. Fear here isn't spectacle; it's accountability. As crowds and profiteers push for a ceremony, Evelyn refuses conversion of grief into content. With ex-producer Gates, a no-nonsense sheriff, and a steel-spined councilwoman, she detunes and de-resonates the mast, proves the mechanism, and writes the Hush Protocol-method public, content private, names not property.
A storm-night near-accident turns resolve into rule; later, the tower comes down, replaced by a Listener Booth where sentences can go home in privacy. Beneath the technical calm runs the emotional cost: a steady tinnitus like interest on a debt already paid, and the smallest, truest exchange the book can offer-"-home." "I'm here."For readers who crave psychological horror novel stakes without jump-scare gimmicks, who love weird fiction grounded in real machines, and who want the hush of consequence more than the roar of spectacle, this is the rare story that turns a radio tower mystery into ethics you can use.
Think small town horror with the rigor of a field manual: detune first, listen privately, stop when harm appears, publish method-not confession. If folk horror suggests that place has a will, The Hush Ledger argues that people can choose a better one.