
THE THING FROM THE LAKE - BY - ELEANOR M. INGRAM
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
CHAPTER VII
CHAPTER VIII
CHAPTER IX
A weary real‑estate agent leads a city dweller to a forgotten farmstead in Connecticut, promising a bargain: a sprawling estate with maples, an orchard, and a lake that could be revived. The house, though worn, greets them with a surprisingly fresh cedar scent and a few lingering antiques, including a striking rose‑wood bed that immediately captures the buyer’s imagination. As the new owner envisions fresh stucco, bright porches, and a scarlet roof, an uneasy feeling settles like rain on the cracked gutters, hinting that the property holds more than just the weight of neglect.
Beyond the porch, a shallow, marsh‑like lake stretches under a gray sky, its water held back by a broken dam. The seller’s eager promises of restoring the lake to a tranquil canoe haven clash with the narrator’s instinctive dread of the swampy basin. With legal paperwork looming, the protagonist steps onto the land, unaware that the house and its surrounding water hide a lingering, unsettling presence that will soon test the very notion of a simple country retreat.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (318K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2007-12-04
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1886–1921
A lively early 20th-century American novelist and short-story writer, remembered for popular magazine fiction and fast-moving automobile tales. Her work also reached the screen, and her last novel, The Thing from the Lake, helped keep her name alive with later readers.
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