MARKED
A Psychological Horror Inspired by the 1966 Pontefract Poltergeist Case
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Ted Lazaris
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
EDITORIAL REVIEW
Atmosphere: MARKED delivers suffocating, institutional dread with surgical precision, transforming a documented 1966 haunting into a chilling study of authority, record, and architectural horror.
Terror: The physical manifestations are immediate and witnessed — skin splits, structures realign, and silence itself becomes weaponized — creating literal on-page terror that refuses comfort.
Impact: Ted Lazaris crafts a cold, unforgettable psychological horror novel that lingers long after the final page, proving that some forces do not haunt — they integrate.
MARKED
A Psychological Horror Inspired by the 1966 Pontefract Poltergeist Case
“Every mark appeared in front of witnesses.”
West Yorkshire, 1966.
The house on East Drive was inspected. Measured. Cleared.
No structural faults. No gas leaks. No intruders.
Yet the first scratches tore through skin while two police officers were standing in the room.
What begins as knocking inside the walls turns deliberate. Furniture lifts and slams without hands. A child is dragged across the floor while constables watch, unable to intervene. Doors split open. Beds rise. The violence does not hide. It performs.
Every incident is logged. Every wound photographed. Every report signed.
And still—no cause found.
As the marks deepen, something inside the house begins to behave with intention. It corrects space. Rearranges weight. Presses inward with calculated force. It does not whisper. It does not possess.
It injures.
When the authorities realize the pattern, it is already too late. The house is no longer reacting.
It is enforcing.
Cold, physical, and relentlessly escalating, MARKED tells one of Britain’s most violent alleged hauntings as institutional terror — where witnesses stand in the room, the scratches appear anyway, and nothing inside the walls is ever identified.