![]() She wonders if Teddy is channeling some strange supernatural presence. And his babysitter (Mallory, our narrator) can’t help but wonder where these pictures are coming from. ![]() ![]() But then he draws a body being dragged through a forest.Īnd a man digging a grave. At first they’re typical kid stuff: birds and rabbits and trees. Teddy (the small child) loves to draw, and we see his illustrations throughout the book. So imagine The Turn of the Screw in a present-day New Jersey suburb.īut the most unique aspect of Hidden Pictures is the actual pictures. She’s soon convinced that something is haunting her new home, and she sets out to investigate. Hidden Pictures is a contemporary spin on a classic story: A young woman moves to a new town and takes a job caring for a small child. What follows is a conversation with Jason on the book, his writing process and authors who inspired him. Hailed by Booklist as “Paranormal perfection” and praised by Publishers Weekly for “holding a mirror up to white, affluent Gen X and asking pointed questions about class, trauma, and horror conventions,” his new novel HIDDEN PICTURES is a gripping mix of upper class suburban drama meets paranormal thriller that Stephen King says “won’t let you put it down.” But now, his first foray into the thriller genre comes complete with several original illustrations and a slew of early praise. ![]() Jason Rekulak, the author of the Edgar Award-nominated coming-of-age novel The Impossible Fortress, is already a established name in the fiction world. ![]()
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