Kill Creek Audiobook By Scott Thomas cover art

Kill Creek

Preview

Audible Standard 30-day free trial

Try Standard free
Select 1 audiobook a month from our entire collection of titles.
Yours as long as you’re a member.
Get unlimited access to bingeable podcasts.
Standard auto renews for $8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Kill Creek

By: Scott Thomas
Narrated by: Bernard Setaro Clark
Try Standard free

$8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Buy for $23.99

Buy for $23.99

At the end of a dark prairie road, nearly forgotten in the Kansas countryside, is the Finch House. For years it has remained empty, overgrown, abandoned. Soon the door will be opened for the first time in decades. But something is waiting, lurking in the shadows, anxious to meet its new guests....

When best-selling horror author Sam McGarver is invited to spend Halloween night in one of the country's most infamous haunted houses, he reluctantly agrees. At least he won't be alone; joining him are three other masters of the macabre, writers who have helped shape modern horror. But what begins as a simple publicity stunt will become a fight for survival. The entity they have awakened will follow them, torment them, threatening to make them a part of the bloody legacy of Kill Creek.

©2017 Scott Thomas (P)2017 Audible, Inc.
Thriller & Suspense Scary Paranormal Haunted Horror Supernatural Suspense Ghost Funny Horror Fiction

Critic reviews

"A slow-burn, skin-crawling haunted house novel that had me on the edge of my seat until the last page. This debut establishes Scott Thomas as a force to be reckoned with on the horror scene. " (Shane D. Keene, HorrorTalk)
Fresh Premise • Well-developed Characters • Unexpected Twists • Creepy Atmosphere • Gradual Tension • Excellent Pacing

Highly rated for:

All stars
Most relevant
It almost feels like territory we've all covered before. Ending twist was not surprising at all. Lost a star for the last three or so chapters.

Largely a fun book, but drags...

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

What made the experience of listening to Kill Creek the most enjoyable?

The narrator was great.

What was your reaction to the ending? (No spoilers please!)

I liked the ending it just took way too long to get there

Which character – as performed by Bernard Setaro Clark – was your favorite?

Sebastion

Did you have an extreme reaction to this book? Did it make you laugh or cry?

I loved the first third and the very end. The middle was terrible and actually made me angry that he spoiled a great start.

Any additional comments?

The main character of this book is hard to like. The change to his character and his arc are kind of non existent. He starts good but for god sake grow a backbone at some point.

Disappointing and too long

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

I used the credit on this book mostly because of the cover. The reviews were good as well. the book starts off slow but consistent and it continues in a gradual ascent, always growing increasingly more intense until it reaches climactic plateau of Horror and suspense.

There were tiny moments that felt a little amateur to me in terms of the writing but they were offset by brilliant moments of writing. the weaker moments of the book we're certainly not enough to make me want to stop listening. in the end, this is a brilliant horror book with Incredible twists and turns. the thoughtfulness of the author is Paramount in this book. this is an excellent listen.
the narration is off the charts. The many voices off this narrator are awesome.

An excellent book. Thoughtful in it's invention

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

It's easy to see the literary parentage of this book: a group of investigators spend a couple of nights in a haunted house, and bloody shenanigans ensue. Shirley Jackson wasn't even the first to do this, though The Haunting of Hill House is probably the most famous in the genre, and still one of the best. But Scott Thomas's debut novel Kill Creek still manages to retell this tale with enough verve and new twists to make it entertaining.

In Kill Creek, it's not paranormal investigators or psychics or skeptics investigating the creepy old Finch House: it's a quartet of horror authors, brought here by an Internet millionaire who offered them a bunch of money to do it as a publicity stunt. Each author comes with his or own reasons, and baggage.

One of the most interesting parts of the book was trying to figure out which real-life authors Thomas was basing his fictional contemporaries on. T.C. Moore is the chick, who writes raw, profane, pornographic horror, heavy on the sex and violence. The ironically-named Daniel Slaughter is a wholesome church-going family man who writes for a Christian audience: his horror novels depict horror as a consequence of sin, with evil always being punished in the end. He worries about losing his audience for going "too dark." Sebastian Cole is the horror emeritus, an old man whose books are classics of the genre, but whose name is receding onto the back shelves of dusty old used bookstores. And Sam McGarver is the up-and-coming contemporary bestseller, who's going through a nasty period of writer's block and marital disharmony.

Having read a fair amount of horror myself, I could certainly make my guesses about which real-life author each character is supposed to represent, though I'm sure Thomas didn't mean them to directly correspond to any real people, just made them composites of identifiable figures. But putting them through their paces, especially when they start critiquing each other's styles, must have been almost as big a meta-fictional kick for the horror author writing about big-name horror authors as proceeding to subject them to the horrors of an evil house.

While nothing was, strictly speaking, original (all the horror elements, all the supernatural twists, all the deaths and the who-will-go-nuts and who-will-survive guessing games, have been seen many times before), I still liked this all the way through even when I saw some twists coming. And the twist at the end was, again, in some ways predictable (standard horror trope) but still executed very well, and chillingly so. Scott Thomas is definitely a name to look out for in future.

A fine new take on the old haunted house tale

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

The story took a while to get going, but once it did, I looked forward to listening. It wasn't terribly scary, but there were a couple of eerie moments and a fun twist at the end. I'm surprised there are negative reviews regarding the narration, as it was near perfect!

Slow Pace But Enjoyable

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

See more reviews