Stranger Things : Darkness on the Edge of Town

Stranger Things : Darkness on the Edge of Town

$128.63
Sale price  $128.63 Regular price 
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Stranger Things : Darkness on the Edge of Town

Stranger Things : Darkness on the Edge of Town

$128.63
Sale price  $128.63 Regular price 
ISBN 9781984819918
CSIN CMPGJGMO1V
Language en

Book info: Stranger Things : Darkness on the Edge of Town (Hardcover, – DELR, 2019) – DELR, 2019. Language: Eng.

CHAPTER ONETHE BIRTHDAY PARTYJULY 4, 1977BROOKLYN, NEW YORKThe hallway was white. Walls, floor, ceiling. The works. White on white on white and it did nothing for Hopper except make him feel slightly dizzy. Snow blindness in the inner city. Imagine that.A whole house that was white, top to bottom, every room, every level. Outside it was a Brooklyn brownstone. Inside it was an art installation. Clutching his glass of red wine by the bowl, Hopper was terrified of spilling even a drop.Only rich people could live in a house like this, he thought, because only rich people could afford the army of cleaners it must need to keep it just so. Rich people who thought they were Andy Warhol. Rich people who were friends with Andy Warhol, or at least knew his decorator.And they had kids, too. Two of them—twins, who, even now, were celebrating with a joint birthday party in the vast kitchen at the rear of the house, a kitchen that opened onto a lush garden surrounded by high walls, an impossible oasis hidden in the spaces between row houses, the greenery somehow surviving the baking summer heat that was turning the rest of New York into a dust bowl. The noise of the party reverberated down the spartan hallway in which Hopper had sought solace, at least for a short while, with his ill-chosen drink.He lifted the glass and peered at the contents. Red wine at a kid’s birthday party.Yes, the Palmers were that kind of people.Hopper sighed and took a sip. This wasn’t how he had planned to spend the Fourth of July, but he knew he shouldn’t judge. The children—all thirty of them, nearly the whole of Sara’s elementary school class—were having a great time, being entertained by a team of professionals hired just for the occasion by the Palmers, and being fed and watered—and sugared—by a catering crew that were probably being paid more for this one gig than Hopper earned in a whole month.It wasn’t just the children who were being entertained. The adults were too. Somewhere down the white hall, through one of the many white doors, the parents—minus Hopper—were all gathered around a show put on just for them. Some kind of magic act, someone had said. Diane had tried to persuade Hopper to come along—had even tried dragging him by one arm—but . . . a magic act?No, he was fine right where he was. Alone. In the hallway of infinite white. With his wine.A roar of laughter came from the kitchen, matched by an almost simultaneous roar from the other end of the hallway. Hopper looked one way, then the other, wondering which act to catch. Then, with a shake of the head as he chided himself for being a party pooper, he headed for the parents. As he opened the door at the end of the hall, he half expected to find beyond a white room with a white grand piano in the center, John Lennon at the keys, Yoko Ono draped over the top.What he found was another reception room, one of several within the brownstone, this one perhaps slightly less stark than the rest of th

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