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The
Sleep of Reason
(Martin Day) |
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On the Back Cover:
Caroline ‘Laska’
Darnell is a perfectly normal 19 year-old: worried about
boyfriends, acne and exams; passionate about dance music
and piercings. But one day a terrible suicide attempt
sees her admitted to the Retreat, a groundbreaking medical
centre in the woods. To her horror, she recognises
the Retreat from her nightmares about an old building
haunted by ghostly dogs, and she realises that something
is very wrong with the institute. She digs deeper and
realises that her family are intimately connected with
the history of the Retreat.
Before he died, Laska’s
father left her a dog tooth pendant and mysterious diaries
and documents. Through these, Laska discovers that the
Retreat was once an asylum that almost burnt to the
ground in 1902. Her research brings her to the attention
of medical officer Dr Smith, and his friends Fitz and
Trix. Smith is utterly fascinated by Laska’s waking
dreams and prophetic nightmares, but if Laska is can’t
trust her own perceptions, can she trust Dr Smith?
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