Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Tab's Terrible Third Eye

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks

His art doesn't imitate life...it destroys lives

Nine-year-old Tab is an artist harboring fears and anxieties that he soothes by drawing. After an encounter with an otherworldly creature, an angry bump afflicts his left temple. The wound burns and itches but will not heal. Worse, it summons ghosts.

Soon, Tab's art portends real-life disasters like his father's death. Tab becomes convinced his bump—his third eye—causes bad things.

Will Tab be able to control this power before it takes another life? Can he free himself from the ghost, who is determined to use that power to untold ends?

The answers lie in the secrets revealed by Tab's terrible third eye.

About the Contents

For information about the contents of Tab's Terrible Third Eye, including warnings, please see the author's site at www.isaacthorne.com/product/tabs-terrible-third-eye

  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Kirkus

      In Thorne's horror novel, a boy battling OCD becomes the target of another kind of unrelenting torture--this one from beyond the grave. Nine-year-old Timothy Aaron Beard Jr. (called "Tab") is a sensitive youngster with a powerful imagination, a grumpy older brother, and bickering parents. His entire world begins to implode during a torrential Tennessee flood as Tab hunkers down in the basement to wait out the worst of the storm with his family. The Beards aren't alone down there for long--a spectral presence manifests in the basement as well. Although unseen by the rest of the family, "Stinkeye Roy" appears to Tab in the subterranean gloom, glaring at him from beneath the bill of a grimy trucker cap with a ghastly set of hollow eye sockets. Things only get worse for young Tab the following day when an angry red welt suddenly emerges on the side of his head. It's painful and full of nasty puss ("it throbbed, hot to his touch"), and Tab is absolutely terrified to discover there is something spherical--like an eyeball--moving around inside the bump. Thorne's nearly moment-by-moment narrative effectively captures Tab's growing feelings of anxiety and dread. The headlong narrative makes for a curiously surreal and off-kilter experience in which neither Tab nor the reader is given any respite from the child's increasingly horrific ordeal. (The scene in which Tab is finally brought to a doctor to have the uncanny welt removed is a particularly gruesome dermatological nightmare worthy of Stephen King.) As Tab slowly begins to uncover more about "Stinkeye Roy" and the disturbing connection he shared with both of Tab's parents in life, the protagonist's increasingly erratic behavior causes those around him to doubt his sanity. It's a double-dose of preadolescent angst that the author could have explored further had he wanted to go really dark, but mercifully--at least for Tab--Thorne doesn't overly tighten the screws. In addition to crafting an intriguing narrative, the author is to be applauded for creating a very apt analog to the challenges of OCD. An engrossing horror yarn with a lot to say about the real-life challenges of OCD.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

Loading