Tamper
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Growing up in the 1960s, Whit is obsessed with paranormal investigation, B-movies, and noise in the walls. In the 70s, he joins the Navy, uses drugs, gets sent to a psychiatrist. As the 80s begin, his friends grow up, Whit is alone. Tamper was the word used by real-life pulp science fiction writer Richard Shaver when he sparked a controversy among the readers of Amazing Stories Magazine in the 1940s by claiming that underground creatures were using invisible rays to tamper with his brain. Whit can relate."Like the Hardy Boys meet Holden Caulfield." - Tim Gilmore, author of The Mad Atlas of Virginia King, creator of the 'spirit of place' website, JaxPsychoGeo.
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11,75 |
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Beschrijving
Bol
Growing up in the 1960s, Whit is obsessed with paranormal investigation, B-movies, and noise in the walls. In the 70s, he joins the Navy, uses drugs, gets sent to a psychiatrist. As the 80s begin, his friends grow up, Whit is alone. Tamper was the word used by real-life pulp science fiction writer Richard Shaver when he sparked a controversy among the readers of Amazing Stories Magazine in the 1940s by claiming that underground creatures were using invisible rays to tamper with his brain. Whit can relate."Like the Hardy Boys meet Holden Caulfield." - Tim Gilmore, author of The Mad Atlas of Virginia King, creator of the 'spirit of place' website, JaxPsychoGeo.
Growing up in the 1960s, Whit is obsessed with paranormal investigation, B-movies, and noise in the walls. In the 70s, he joins the Navy, uses drugs, gets sent to a psychiatrist. As the 80s begin, his friends grow up, Whit is alone. Tamper was the word used by real-life pulp science fiction writer Richard Shaver when he sparked a controversy among the readers of Amazing Stories Magazine in the 1940s by claiming that underground creatures were using invisible rays to tamper with his brain. Whit can relate."Like the Hardy Boys meet Holden Caulfield." - Tim Gilmore, author of The Mad Atlas of Virginia King, creator of the 'spirit of place' website, JaxPsychoGeo.