Something is brewing in the northern part of Vermont, something supernatural in nature. A Special Black Ops force is assigned to take care of these occurrences, but what happens when it hits home, and the past that you thought you had moved on from comes back to haunt you. Sergeant Kensin Cook had left Norfolk for reasons he couldn’t explain to most of the people he had grown up with. But when a killer from his childhood escapes and his intentions turn towards finishing what he started years ago, Cook has no choice but to come back to town. Jessi Callder has always seen what others haven’t and that power gave her life a different turn. With the ancient myths and knowledge of the occult, she might be the only one able to stop what’s coming, a resurrection of pure evil, something deadly enough to call home everyone it had touched in the past. Will Jessi and Kensin be able to stop the resurrection, or will this evil finally finish its deadly plan?
From ghosts and ghouls to werewolves and vampires, there's nothing strange about growing up in New England. Mythology and legends tend to run wild in most parts of the Northeast, and when you're raised with it, you tend to draw on it for inspiration. Ghost stories have always been part of childhood, but what happens when those stories follow you around? You write about them of course. Dawn takes life in the mountains, and twists it into her own. Most recently doing so with "The Pack," a dive into the hidden world of a people not unlike us, who hold a secret... their relation to the legendary werewolves of old. This book series came along from a ten-episode season written for TV, and has taken on a life of it's own.
Love a great spooky paranormal read? The S.P.I.R.I.T. Series fits the bill. Each story can be read as a standalone. Its a fast paced story with complex characters and a deep backstory. It will definitely suck you in.
I made it to the half way point of this book before calling it. I loved the first books in the series, but struggled to get pulled into this installment. The book keeps flipping back and forth between present and past at such a rapid pace that you tend to struggle to stay in the story. I was in the middle of the story (the half way point) and hadn't really gained any new or pertinent information. So I gave the book three stars for the unknown.