A Lovecraftian tale set during Japan’s Meiji era. The story follows Charles T. Wayland, an American writer and adventurer with a taste for the macabre, as he is called to the home of his longtime friend and colleague, Hidekichi, who has found a strange unidentifiable artifact. Hidekichi demonstrates for Charles that the artifact is a window between worlds, allowing them to psychically explore the remotest corners of the universe. But Charles is horrified to learn that Hidekichi is already playing host to another psychic traveler; a malevolent being from a dark world with designs on ruling over mankind.
In the meticulously planned utopia of the 25th Ward, a seemingly random murder triggers a web of interconnected investigations. Told through three parallel perspectives — Correctness, Placebo, and Matchmaker — the story follows detectives, journalists, and ordinary residents as they uncover hidden patterns of crime, control, and human nature in a futuristic city on the edge.
Underground artist Skinner has been taken hostage in outer space. The alien overlords have forced him to make an art show that blends art, performance, and controlled chaos — created under pressure, surveillance, and strange cosmic rules.
What if you could watch LOST in chronological order? From the earliest days of the island, all the way through 2007. Welcome to Chronologically LOST, which allows you to do just that.
Two FBI agents, one male and one female, are partnered together and sent to unusual parts of the country to work with local police and solve crimes. Their cases expose them to different cultures each week (i.e. one week an Aryan nation community, the next an upper class neighborhood in Boston). One is a former high school teacher who is driven by passion and impulse, while the other is more centered and logical. Initially, the two are reluctant partners, though they gradually develop a strong, platonic bond, learning to trust and depend on each other.