Difference between revisions of "Dark Island"
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(New page: * '''Author''': Dorothy Daniels * '''Publisher''': Warner * '''Year''': 1972 Dark Island * FOR JANET THAYER, NO PART OF HAITI IS SAFE -- BUT RANCHO MARIA HAS ITS SPECIAL DANGERS....) |
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+ | [[category:1972 Releases]] | ||
* '''Author''': [[Dorothy Daniels]] | * '''Author''': [[Dorothy Daniels]] | ||
* '''Publisher''': [[Warner]] | * '''Publisher''': [[Warner]] | ||
− | * '''Year''': | + | * '''Year''': 1972 |
Dark Island * | Dark Island * | ||
FOR JANET THAYER, NO PART OF HAITI IS SAFE -- BUT RANCHO MARIA HAS ITS SPECIAL DANGERS. Janet comes to the island illegally to find her missing brother; her only clue leads her to a mansion called Rancho Maria and its strangely hostile master, Ben Coburn. Reluctantly he protects her from the police, but asserts that she is in greater danger from voodoo. Her brother had been turned into a zombie; if she stays, she will die. Skeptical, Janet refuses to leave. Then she discovers that she is not immune to the power of the voodoo drums -- and that Rancho Maria is no refuge from their power to kill. | FOR JANET THAYER, NO PART OF HAITI IS SAFE -- BUT RANCHO MARIA HAS ITS SPECIAL DANGERS. Janet comes to the island illegally to find her missing brother; her only clue leads her to a mansion called Rancho Maria and its strangely hostile master, Ben Coburn. Reluctantly he protects her from the police, but asserts that she is in greater danger from voodoo. Her brother had been turned into a zombie; if she stays, she will die. Skeptical, Janet refuses to leave. Then she discovers that she is not immune to the power of the voodoo drums -- and that Rancho Maria is no refuge from their power to kill. |
Revision as of 05:12, 29 August 2007
- Author: Dorothy Daniels
- Publisher: Warner
- Year: 1972
Dark Island * FOR JANET THAYER, NO PART OF HAITI IS SAFE -- BUT RANCHO MARIA HAS ITS SPECIAL DANGERS. Janet comes to the island illegally to find her missing brother; her only clue leads her to a mansion called Rancho Maria and its strangely hostile master, Ben Coburn. Reluctantly he protects her from the police, but asserts that she is in greater danger from voodoo. Her brother had been turned into a zombie; if she stays, she will die. Skeptical, Janet refuses to leave. Then she discovers that she is not immune to the power of the voodoo drums -- and that Rancho Maria is no refuge from their power to kill.