Revival Road
by Chris DiLeo
Genre: Horror
A
PART OF GOD’S PLAN
On
an average street in a typical suburban town, a child dies in an
all-too-plausible accident. For Sherri Matthews, a neighbor who has
dedicated her life to God’s calling, this is part of God’s plan.
And when the child wakes in the morgue seemingly healed, Sherri knows
she must now prepare the way for what comes next.
A
SINISTER POWER AT WORK
“Something
big is coming,” the revived child promises. His pet dog, dead and
buried weeks prior, has come back as well, but more monster than
mutt. Abbott French and Ellie Pike have never trusted Sherri or her
unwavering belief and don’t believe these resurrections are God’s
work. But how to explain when his sickly mother dies and is
resurrected? And what about the horror Chance Gold encounters in the
woods and the voice that insists, You’re
mine? Or the secret a
mental patient who murdered her friend knows? Or the terrible thing
Carl Nichols is hiding in his basement? Or the hundreds of crows
gathering across the street as if in anticipation?
A
SHOWDOWN BETWEEN GOOD AND EVIL
As
Sherri gathers believers, she takes an unthinkable step to fulfill
God’s plan. Meanwhile, Abbott and Ellie must find out why this is
happening and how they can stop it. The stage is set for a gruesome,
apocalyptic showdown between good and evil, between life and
death—where life may be the most horrifying prospect of all.
Not
your typical zombie novel, Revival
Road is a
fast-paced thrill ride of horrors human and supernatural, an
exploration of the dark underbelly of suburban life, and a testament
to fears elemental and otherworldly.
The only guarantee
in life is death.
Except when you die on Revival Road.
DiLeo grew up in a house filled with books and fell in love with the written word before he even started school. That love grew even further when he penned his first story, a tale he wrote in second grade about a raindrop that is born in the clouds, lives its full life as it plummets, and dies in a watery splash on the sidewalk.
His love for the macabre comes from his father. Warren DiLeo loved Halloween, decorating the house in lavish, grand fashion, complete with gravestones, costumed mannequins, fog and strobe lights. But the centerpiece was a wooden coffin fit for Dracula. In full disguise, Warren would emerge from the coffin to delight trick-or-treaters.
During the rest of the year, that coffin stood among the bookshelves in the basement. Its contents: horror novels. Following Warren’s death, 11-year-old DiLeo began reading those novels as a way to commune with his father.
DiLeo’s love for story and language found a home in the horror tale.
He sold his first short story (a Poe-esque tale of teenage madness and murder) when he was seventeen. He wrote his first novel two years later, and he hasn’t stopped since.
DiLeo self-published the novels Hudson House, Calamity, and Blood Mountain. Bloodshot Books published The Devil Virus, Headshot Books published Dark Heart, and JournalStone published Dead End. They are all available.
DiLeo teaches high school English in New York’s Hudson Valley where he tries to inspire a love for the unquiet coffin in his students. He is also at work on his next novel.
Reader.
Writer.
Teacher.
@authordileo
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The cover is interesting. It sets the tone for the book l
ReplyDeleteThis sounds really good!
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