We Are Monsters
<span><b>Nominated for a Bram Stoker Award for Superior Achievement in a First Novel</b><br /><b><br />"<i>We Are Monsters</i> is fantastic -- a frightening and intense thriller and one hell of a debut. I was blown away." -Brian Keene, best-selling author of <i>Ghoul</i> and <i>The Rising</i></b></span><b><span><span><span><span><span></span></span></span></span></span></b><b><span><b><span><span><span><span><span><br /><br />"Complex, terrifying, and still humane.</span></span></span></span> Easily the best book I've read this year." </span></b> -Mercedes M. Yardley, author of <i>Pretty Little Dead Girls: A Novel of Murder and Whimsy</i></span><br /><br />"<i>We Are Monsters</i> is a high-voltage thrill, like watching Sam Fuller's <i>Shock Corridor</i> and Joel Schumacher's <i>Flatliners</i> on split screens." -Jonathan Moore, Bram Stoker nominated author of<i> The Poison Artist</i>, <i>Close Reach</i>, and <i>Redheads</i></b><span></span><br /><i><br />The Apocalypse has come to the Sugar Hill mental asylum.</i><br /><br />He's the hospital's newest, and most notorious, patient--a paranoid schizophrenic who sees humanity's dark side.<br /><br />Luckily he's in good hands. Dr. Eli Alpert has a talent for healing tortured souls. And his protégé is working on a cure for schizophrenia, a drug that returns patients to their former selves. But unforeseen side effects are starting to emerge. Forcing prior traumas to the surface. Setting inner demons free.<br /><br />Monsters have been unleashed inside the Sugar Hill mental asylum. They don't have fangs or claws. They look just like you or me.