Inside this volume are stories no one should read—yet they exist, waiting for someone to turn the page. A girl finds her reflection smiling back without her. A birthday party has one extra guest no one invited. A viral slime recipe starts changing kids into something else. A father keeps working for his family, even after death.
Each tale in Inkbound is sharper than the last, pulling you deeper into the curse that binds them. At first, they seem like fiction—urban legends, school rumors, creepy YouTube stories. But then they start to echo real life. Your life.
Because Inkbound doesn’t just tell horror stories. It writes them—as you read.
I like the way this book comes together. All the stories are good with a lot to tie them together. Names follow through and the book warns the reader not to finish. I enjoyed the whole thing, so if I disappear, blame the book.