Having a drink at a bar, a man comes to realize that the monster from under his bed is drinking beside him.
"James Henry Hall's ROOM FOR TWO has one of those shimmering, prized premises; the kind that, once you hear what it's about, you add it immediately to your bank of urban legends; the kind of story you wanna tell the next person you see. But no story lives on premise alone, and Hall delivers it with a closed fist, knuckles on a wooden bar, or fingertips, perhaps, tapping the boxspring under the bed." -- Josh Malerman, Author of Bird Box.
"James Henry Hall's ROOM FOR TWO has one of those shimmering, prized premises; the kind that, once you hear what it's about, you add it immediately to your bank of urban legends; the kind of story you wanna tell the next person you see. But no story lives on premise alone, and Hall delivers it with a closed fist, knuckles on a wooden bar, or fingertips, perhaps, tapping the boxspring under the bed." -- Josh Malerman, Author of Bird Box.