The Mountain by William Ollie
(Thunderstorm Books)
To Eddie Marshall, the idea seemed ridiculous: hitchhike to the mountains of North Carolina to help his lifelong pal haul a truck load of Christmas trees out to Louisiana.
But Mark Rockley had a way of making the ridiculous seem perfectly reasonable. And what did Eddie have to lose anyway? At least up here he could take his mind off crooked managers and bickering band-mates, and the conniving woman he’d left behind.
Had he known what happened to Harold and Maggie on the mountain this morning, he would never have agreed to go up there tonight. Even if there was a patch of trees free for the taking.
If Mark and Eddie had known what waited in the shadow of Rickert’s Peak, they would have stayed far, far away from that place.
Tonight, reason turns to madness, madness gives way to terror.
And bad things happen on… The Mountain.
I have really enjoyed every one of William Ollie’s books so far. I was pretty excited when he emailed me a Kindle copy of his latest book “The Mountain.” One thing you can always rely on with William’s books is that you are going to get a great story filled with great characters.
I have to say that “The Mountain” exceeded my expectations. I have been reading some dark, disturbing, emotionally taxing books lately and was looking for a change of pace. “The Mountain” was just what I was looking for.
Think “Deliverance”, combined with “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” with a bit of “The Hills Have Eyes” stirred in with the delivery that only William Ollie can provide.
“The Mountain” is brutally violent, with plenty of blood and violence, drug runners, a crooked cop, a corrupt care salesman and an incest deformed mountain family. It was a hell of a lot of fun to read and I enjoyed every second of it.
I can always count on William to provide great characters for his stories. In “The Mountain” the Johnson family that lives on mountain is as sick and depraved as they come. A brood of demented, deformed creatures that treat their own family as bad as they treat their victims.
The story starts out fast and furious with a man planning on murdering his wife on the mountain, making it look like an accident so he can collect the life insurance. Well, that plan didn’t pan out to say the least.
From there the story just continues to get better and better, William continues to notch up the carnage and violence, with enough dead bodies and blood to appease any horror fan. When you finally make it to the end you will say to yourself. “Damn, that was a hell of a ride!”, I know I did.
Thunderstorm Books and William Ollie have a winner on their hands and I highly recommend it.









