Eerie Exhibits: Five Macabre Museum Tales by Victoria Williamson
Thank you @the_writeReads for letting me be part of this tour and reviewing this book.
Eerie Exhibits is short stories and is horror genre. I thoroughly enjoyed reading the different stories and they were all based about a museum. Eerie Exhibits was easy a read and each short story was fascinating and intriguing to read. I like all the characters and there was a significant amount of suspense and creepiness running through the book. I read this book in a couple of hours. Furthermore, I have read numerous Victoria Williams books. They all have been incredible reads and this one did not let her down. 5 stars.
Blurb
Five unnerving tales of the weird and uncanny from award-winning author Victoria Williamson.
A room full of screaming butterflies.
An unsettling smile on the face of a carved sarcophagus.
A painting that draws its viewer into the disturbing past.
A stuffed bear that growls in the dead of night.
And a shell that whispers more sinister sounds than the sigh of the sea…
Dare you cross the threshold of the old Museum and view its eerie exhibits?
About the Author
Victoria Williamson is an award-winning author from Glasgow, Scotland, who has worked as an educator in a number of different countries, including as an English teacher in China, a secondary school science teacher in Cameroon, a teacher trainer in Malawi, and an
additional support needs teacher in the UK. Her many visits to Kelvingrove Art Gallery and
Museum from a young age inspired this set of short stories for adults based on the real and imaginary exhibits that captured her interest over the years, and led to her current studies of history and archaeology.
Victoria works part time writing books for the education company Twinkl and spends the rest of her time writing novels for children and adults, and visiting schools, libraries and literary festivals to give author talks and run creative writing workshops. When not writing or talking about books, she’s often to be found up to her knees in mud on an archaeological dig or tangled up in a ball of wool playing with a crochet hook.
www.strangelymagical.com
(X) @strangelymagic
(Instagram) strangelymagicalbooks
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