Found in a dying jungle, six strange babies ae spirited off to the United States where a fantastic discovery is made.
Like us, they are hominids. They don't share our DNA but they're highly intelligent.
So they're animals--less than slaves, but as smart as us.
They are incredibly valuable and the company that discovered them sees a fortune in the making by selling their offspring. But not if primate expert Beth Cooke, brought in to get them to breed, and her Army Ranger husband Charlie have anything to say about it.
Will these brilliant captives get their chance to discover themselves, to look up at the stars, to be free...or will they become an animal commodity, bought and sold like cattle?
Get this extraordinary novel today and find out!
THC is Greg Carlwood’s interview-based podcast dedicated to seeking out the brightest minds for our troubled times.
NEW THC! Whitley Strieber @WhitleyStrieber | Them: The Soul-Body Connection, The Secrecy Policy, & The Good Questions https://t.co/D3vcbUPoAq The return of one of the great paranormal thinkers of our time! Brace for weirdness! https://t.co/GHP05PSxzm
An imprint of Midnight Reader/Pulp Retro Throwback @JeffFunk, Editor | a div. of @PulpBuzz • subscribe https://t.co/9HG8EHjP9w
FLASH REVIEW: A New World by Whitley Strieber https://t.co/tfrcj4nKfL
Writer of scifi, fantasy, horror. Member Horror Writers Association, Atlanta chapter. Regular on @myopiapodcast. Check out my books on Amazon.
@meyekeys Just posted this--Whitley Strieber's debut novel THE WOLFEN. https://t.co/f5aLaBksTT Carnivores with human-level intelligence hunting in decaying 1970s New York City.
Praise for Whitley Strieber's Fiction
The Wolfen--"A horror-happy winner," Kirkus Reviews
The Hunger--"Vivid, skillfully written," the Washington Post
Warday--"A first-rate novel, as real as snapshots of tomorrow," New York Daily News
The Forbidden Zone--"The best book of its kind since Jack Finney's Body Snatchers--Yeah, that good!" Booklist
2012: the War for Souls--"Immensely entertaining," Booklist
The Grays--"A first-rate exercise in literary paranoia," People Magazine