Paul Tremblay delivers another mind-bending horror novel . . . The Pallbearers Club is a
welcome casket of chills to shoulder. - Washington Post A cleverly voiced psychological
thriller from the nationally bestselling author of The Cabin at the End of the World and
Survivor Song. What if the coolest girl you've ever met decided to be your friend? Art Barbara
was so not cool. He was a seventeen-year-old high school loner in the late 1980s who listened
to hair metal had to wear a monstrous back-brace at night for his scoliosis and started an
extracurricular club for volunteer pallbearers at poorly attended funerals. But his new friend
thought the Pallbearers Club was cool. And she brought along her Polaroid camera to take
pictures of the corpses. Okay that part was a little weird. So was her obsessive knowledge of
a notorious bit of New England folklore that involved digging up the dead. And there were other
strange things - terrifying things - that happened when she was around usually at night. But
she was his friend so it was okay right? Decades later Art tries to make sense of it all by
writing The Pallbearers Club: A Memoir. But somehow this friend got her hands on the manuscript
and well she has some issues with it. And now she's making cuts. Seamlessly blurring the
lines between fiction and memory the supernatural and the mundane The Pallbearers Club is an
immersive suspenseful portrait of an unusual and disconcerting relationship.