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The Old Lady

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The Old Lady

By: Kristopher Triana
Narrated by: Cora Blouch
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About this listen

She never wanted to come home.

After the death of her estranged father, Tracey returns to the remote cabin she grew up in. As a traumatized veteran of the Vietnam War, Tracey’s father subjected her to rigorous survival training under brutal conditions, believing it was for her own good. She escaped and never looked back. Now in her fifties with a criminal record, Tracey returns to claim the property she’s inherited.

Hiking through the forest, teenage Alicia and her friends get lost in the snow. They stumble upon a compound run by extremists, and when the teens see too much, only Alicia manages to escape. She searches for help and comes across a secluded cabin.

With the panicked girl banging on her door, Tracey is launched into combat mode, awakening her inner demons. Though she suffers from extreme PTSD, she is skilled in combat, making her a deadly adversary—perhaps too deadly. As a snowstorm hammers down, the women must work together to save Alicia’s friends from their captors.

Alicia has a protector now, but what if this strange old lady is even more dangerous than the people she’s escaped from?

The Old Lady is a new tale of survival horror from Kristopher Triana, author of Gone to See the River Man and Full Brutal, and columnist for Backwoods Survival Guide.

©2024 Kristopher Triana (P)2024 Kristopher Triana
Horror Suspense Thriller & Suspense
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“Worry about the six that will kill you, not the twelve that will put you away.”

Crikey! This was my first @kristopher_triana novel but it won’t be my last. On the surface, The Old Lady is a searing survival horror full of potentially triggering, brutal, transgressive violence (and it is that), but at its core it’s a poignant, sympathetic examination of trauma.

At just 287 pages the novel carries not an ounce of fat, and it propels you into an action-packed thrill-ride that will have you recoiling and fist-pumping in equal measure, but always hungry to devour more - this is a hard book to put down.

In Tracey, Triana has penned a pitch black, morally ambivalent protagonist, and the character development work here provides such exquisite depth, that you’re with her all the way to the explosive, emotional conclusion.

Tough, violent, tragic. An exceptional achievement.

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