
"One of the greatest suspense-filled books I have ever read" ★★★★★

"I found it rivaling some of Stephen King's and Dean Koontz's early works - high praise indeed" ★★★★★ "Page-turner with a twist! I was hanging on to every word!" ★★★★★ "Edge-of-my-seat experience! I felt I was indeed living the horror" ★★★★★ "Huge fan of Mr Bates! You won't be disappointed" ★★★★★ "Suicide Forest is up there with Joe Hill's Heart Shaped Box" ★★★★★ "This is one of the best books I have ever read!" ★★★★★ That only happens to me with one other writer - Stephen King" ★★★★★ "I had to stop reading at certain points because he was freaking me out. "I was hooked from the first page!" ★★★★★ "Non-stop adrenaline rush from beginning to end" ★★★★★ "Definitely gave me chills reading this late at night which hasn't happened since I was a 13-year-old teenager reading Stephen King's It for the first time" ★★★★★ "The most chilling book I’ve ever read!" ★★★★★ He's one of my new favorite writers, and I urge everyone to check him out" ★★★★★ "I sort of fell into Jeremy Bates by accident, and I'm so glad I did.

"Any Stephen King or Dean Koontz fan will love it" ★★★★★ "Definitely recommend to all fans of modern horror" ★★★★★

"Old-school horror story reminiscent of Stephen King" ★★★★★ What begins innocently enough, however, morphs into a nightmare beyond description that no one could have imagined-with, perhaps, the exception of Dr. He and two student assistants share an eight-hour rotational schedule to observe their young Australian test subjects around the clock. Roy Wallis, an esteemed psychology professor at UC Berkeley, is attempting to recreate the same experiment during the summer break in a soon-to-be demolished building on campus. The prisoners ultimately reverted to murder, self-mutilation, and madness. "SHOCKING.TERRIFYING" -Entertainment Weeklyįrom USA Today and #1 Amazon bestselling author Jeremy Bates comes the second book in the all-new WORLD'S SCARIEST LEGENDS series.In 1954, at the start of the Cold War, the Soviet military offered four political prisoners their freedom if they participated in an experiment requiring them to remain awake for fourteen days while under the influence of a powerful stimulant gas.
