The Woman in Crosley Tower
(2026)(The third book in the Uncanny Ohio series)
A Story by Edward Trimnell
Summer, 1987.
Nineteen-year-old Steve Harris is taking a biology class at the University of Cincinnati when he meets Mary Wilsona smart, funny English major with an obsession for local legends.
One rumor fascinates her above all others:
The fourteenth floor of UC’s Crosley Tower.
Students whisper that something is wrong with the deserted upper floors of the concrete high-rise.
Most dismiss the stories as nonsense.
Then Steve and Mary decide to investigate.
What they find is impossible.
The next day, Mary vanishes.
Not just from the university.
From everywhere.
Her name disappears from class records. Her coworkers don’t recognize it. Even her boyfriend insists he’s never heard of her.
Steve becomes the only person left who remembers that Mary Wilson ever existed.
As he searches for answers, he uncovers a terrifying secret hidden inside Crosley Towerone that reaches beyond ghosts, beyond time itself, and into realities that should never touch our own.
Some doors should never be opened.
And some people are never meant to come back.
Genre: Fantasy
Nineteen-year-old Steve Harris is taking a biology class at the University of Cincinnati when he meets Mary Wilsona smart, funny English major with an obsession for local legends.
One rumor fascinates her above all others:
The fourteenth floor of UC’s Crosley Tower.
Students whisper that something is wrong with the deserted upper floors of the concrete high-rise.
Most dismiss the stories as nonsense.
Then Steve and Mary decide to investigate.
What they find is impossible.
The next day, Mary vanishes.
Not just from the university.
From everywhere.
Her name disappears from class records. Her coworkers don’t recognize it. Even her boyfriend insists he’s never heard of her.
Steve becomes the only person left who remembers that Mary Wilson ever existed.
As he searches for answers, he uncovers a terrifying secret hidden inside Crosley Towerone that reaches beyond ghosts, beyond time itself, and into realities that should never touch our own.
Some doors should never be opened.
And some people are never meant to come back.
Genre: Fantasy
Used availability for Edward Trimnell's The Woman in Crosley Tower