General Information =================== Title: Pine Deep - Ink Author: Jonathan Maberry Read By: Ray Porter Copyright: (c)2020 Jonathan Maberry (P)2020 Macmillan Audio Audible.com Release: November 17th, 2020 Original Publication: 2020 Genre: Supernatural Thriller Format: MPEG-4 (M4B) Publisher: Macmillan Audio Duration: 15 hours, 9 minutes, 33 seconds Chapters: 165 Unabridged: Yes Media Information ================= Source Format: Audible AAX Source Sample Rate: 44100 Hz Source Channels: 2 Source Bitrate: 126 kbits Lossless Encode: Yes Encoded Codec: AAC / M4B Encoded Sample Rate: 44100 Hz Encoded Channels: 2 Encoded Bitrate: 126 kbits Chapter Adjust: inAudible 1.97 -KAZIN Chapter Rename: inAudible 1.97 -KAZIN Ripper: inAudible 1.97''True Decrypt''-KAZIN ID Tagging: iTunes 12.7.3.46 -KAZIN Book Description ================ From New York Times best-selling author Jonathan Maberry comes a standalone supernatural thriller, Ink, about a memory thief who feeds on the most precious of dreams. Tattoo artist Patty Cakes has her dead daughter's face tattooed on the back of her hand. Day by day, it begins to fade, taking with it all of Patty's memories of her daughter. All she's left with is the certain knowledge she has forgotten her lost child. The awareness of that loss is tearing her apart. Monk Addison is a private investigator whose skin is covered with the tattooed faces of murder victims. He is a predator who hunts for killers, and the ghosts of all of those dead people haunt his life. Some of those faces have begun to fade, too, destroying the very souls of the dead. All through the town of Pine Deep, people are having their most precious memories stolen. The monster seems to target the lonely, the disenfranchised, the people who need memories to anchor them to this world. Something is out there. Something cruel and evil is feeding on the memories, erasing them from the hearts and minds of people like Patty and Monk and others. Ink is the story of a few lonely, damaged people hunting for a memory thief. When all you have are memories, there is no greater horror than forgetting. A Macmillan Audio production from St. Martin's Griffin