This aforementioned assumption proves fatally incorrect. Moreover, the smell emanating from the spill is one of sweet cherry, similar to lollipops, which must of course be harmless if not favorable. The local authorities deem the contents of the spill to be safe, based merely on the assumption that products coming from a women's label are more than likely benign. When a tanker trunk with "Ladies Inc." emblazoned on the side crashes in a quiet area in New York, an area it doesn't have authorization to be in, it liberally spills its contents all over the road and into the surrounding atmosphere. One life-altering evening turns this family's, along with most of New York's, perceptions on the nuclear family and male/female relationships upside down. Unfortunately, their son, Andy, is caught in the middle of his parent's childish banter and family chaos. Thus it comes as no surprise that Tom continually spends late evenings in bars and cheats on his wife. Tom Braun and his wife, Susan, aren't exactly a picturesque couple. In this modern tale of the ages-old battle of the sexes carried to the extreme, Jack Ketchum again provides listeners with an excursion into horror as relentless as a John Woo film. Ladies' Night is a non-stop rollercoaster ride of sheer nerve rattling terror, previously deemed too violent for mass-market publication.
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