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November 18th, 2014

11/18/2014

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Extreme horror with sexual situations, gore, and objectionable themes

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Big Terror....

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Big Sexy....

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September 26th, 2014

9/26/2014

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© 2014 PUBIENNE TUEUR DE CHEVEUX Essel Pratt
© 2014 DEATHERZ Alex S. Johnson
© 2014 SPIDER MAN Mathias Jansson
© 2014 PACHYDERM Jeremy Maddux
© 2014 STANKPIT Dr. Reverend Lance Carbuncle
© 2014 DONT HANG YOURSELF (WHERE'S THE FUN IN THAT?) Toneye Eyenot
© 2014 THE OBELISK OF SOULS Lisa Dabrowski
© 2014 THE YEAR OF THE CAT Mark Woods
© 2014 ALL THAT REMAINS Amanda Lyons
© 2014 THE PERFECT WOMAN Kerry G.S. Lipp
© 2014 LUST AMONG THE REEFS Matthew Arkham.
© 2014 WHERE HERE SORROW RUNS TO WHEN IT MUST HIDE Christopher Ropes
© 2014 ALL MANNER OF SIN Toneye Eyenot
© 2014 GRAILITH Susan Simone
© 2014 RENDEVOUS Stuart Keane
© 2014 OUT OF DARKNESS COMES LIFE Michael Fisher
© 2014 THERE GOES THE NEIGHBORHOOD Jim Goforth
© 2014 DRIFT Todd Misura
© 2014 TERATOMA Dr. Reverend Lance Carbuncle
© 2014 DR. SADISTIC Lisa Dabrowski
© 2014 VENGEFUL GAMES OF FORCED CONSUMPTION Jason Hughes
© 2014 BETTER TO HAVE LOVED? Dona Fox
© 2014 A MESSAGE OF FLESH Kevin J MacLeod
The book comes with warnings of explicit sex, violence, gore, and objectionable content. These are brutal stories but each has a special reason for being in the book. The writers dared something. Mr. Pratt has a lead female character that readers will never forget, Ms Lyons runs with a lesbian main character who is heart-wrenching, and Mr. Arkham lets a female character go wild. I think that is interesting, to see how the writers dared something new for females in literature. Mr Johnson and Ms Dabroski are sarcastic and witty, and Mr Woods delivers a story that is funny and horrific at the same time. If a reader enjoys a little dark poetry, Mr. Eyenot, Ms. Fox, and Mr Jansson are chillingly brilliant. Pachyderm is the most bizarre piece and haunting. Ms Simone, Mr Fisher, Mr Misura, and Mr. Lipp are simply astounding in their prose; their stories are not what they seem to be! Mr. Keane and Mr. Carbunkle contribute  pieces that  have to be read twice to get the underlying messages and both write with strong imagery. Mr Goforth entertains...there is not a single dull moment. I often brag on Mr Ropes because he took a difficult idea, one that could go wrong easily, and carefully controlled it...no, he manipulated it into an ending that is almost too intense. Mr. Hughes adds a story that should be rejected. It should be hidden and never read, because, sadly it is much too real, and it will bother readers terribly. It upset me; that's why it had to be here. It carries a strong message. Finally, The Editor's Choice was by Mr MacLeod and was one of the most professional, unusual stories I have ever read. I thought about stopping several times as I read. I couldn't believe he dared to write as he did but the end is perfect and it all comes together in a cacophony of emotion. Yes, I was shocked at most of these. I was nervous about accepting them, I was surprised at how smart the works were, and I was stunned by the talent. If nothing else, the bravery of these writers is to be applauded. Is it for everyone? No!  Are the stories glorified violence and sex?  No/ I think Mr. Lipp's story gave me direction. It was very brutal, but I think it is real. Maybe we don't all want to know these are the things that go on at the fringes of the world. We don't want to know this is real life and that we are under censorship and never hear about these atrocities. Not a one glorifies anything evil; in fact. each author makes it clear, in underlying tones, that these things are repulsive and not good. If anything, these are warning of what dangers lurk and what is out there; we can be thankful we read about these things and not experience them.
Above all, while these writer write mainstream horror as well, this was their chance to be a little wild and break rules. Some readers will never finish this book. They may not make it 1/2 way. I get that. I think some will get the messages and understand that the world is scary. I  hope some will be so scared they never sleep again...but then...isn't that was extreme horror is all about?

You can stop reading now. If you wish to understand why I wanted to do this book...read on. The below is the forward I wrote for RFC1

Forward

Devils, Details, and Tequila
I have to share something, so bear with me.
When I was young, I was sick a lot and so I read. In a few years, I was finished with classics, so I started on modern fiction. My mom would take me shopping and leave me in the book section  (it was safe then) and I would pick a book to buy. One time, I found my book and the title escapes me, but I happened to see this book by a new writer named Dean Koontz and I began reading. Wow. I was hooked. I also felt that Mom wouldn’t let me read such a book, so it took several trips back to the store before I finished the book.
Each time, I found what I wanted to buy and then escaped into the scary stuff, and yes, I ear-marked the pages, and no one bought “my” copy.
About this same time, several things happened. One was that my aunt shared her books with me and they were short stories that were “Presented by” Alfred Hitchcock. It was a gold mine of horror by new names (to me). At the same time, my mother belonged to The Book of the Month Club, and she ordered what was trendy; I doubt she read half of those books, but she allowed me them all. I read The Graduate, Flowers for Algernon ,Valley of the Dolls, Midnight Cowboy, and Rose Mary’s Baby.
First, I was young, and I didn’t understand everything in those books, but I understood that within the non-horror ones, there was absolute horror! This was why Mom didn’t censor my reading; I really got that there was scary stuff in the world.
About this same time, a book came out that was said to be “horrifying,” “perverted,” “scandalous,” and worse.  That was The Exorcist. I read it and a light went on in my young head. I took the sum of all my reading and understood that there was scary writing all over the place but there were levels. I liked all levels. And like a reader possessed, I didn’t stop with the devil in Blatty’s book but forged on, reading all of the horror that I could find.
A note here: My mom knew I was reading Mr. Koontz’s book but she was so glad she had a reader that she didn’t force a battle. I did eventually buy the book so we are all ethical here.
Those are the details. And they are the devil.
Fast forward.
I have written horror for about thirty-five years now. I read all I can find. I also work with many horror writers as friends and as part of J Ellington Ashton Press. We talk often about authors and books we love. We say the same names often: King, Barker, Laymon, Lovecraft, Shelley, McCammon, and more. Moreover, to me, as rowdy as these can be, they are our steak and potato dinners.  Not fancy? Have you never had a perfectly cooked, rare steak and a loaded baked Potato? Nectar of the gods, I say. In fact, that is such a classic dinner, that it’s a gold standard, and that is what those authors I just listed are: classic writers of horror.
Occasionally, it’s nice to add a perfect Caesar salad to the dinner. I love authors’ books that add a little more spice but are still classic and brilliant. We all know those stories with a bit ‘o the devil in them; we read and re-read them.
There are also times, when we like something extra. I don’t mean the truffle pudding with glittering bits that don’t scare us. We are readers and we’ve passed that stage of being a little kid who hides in the book section and gets chills (ok, and nightmares) from passages. Occasionally, we want a shot of straight tequila to knock back. To finish the good meal.
That was how Rejected: For Content happened. A round table of authors and artists were talking with me about extreme horror and those writers we read for that bit of shock, and the same names came up several times. That is our tequila shot: and we love it. We love that taste of bitter truth, nightmarish images, and of the feelings of anguish. We like being disturbed and bothered.
In secret, a few of us like something else, although we can’t explain why. Compare it again to the fine meal. It’s taking that shot of tequila and snorting it right up our noses!
I know. I already said I don’t know why we like that. Most cannot admit they do this secretly.
In Rejected for Content, we are offering that shot of booze right up in the sinuses where it hurts so good. Many readers and writers won’t get the collection. Good, because that makes me feel a little better about the world, but some will not only get why we are delivering it, but will love it. For those, we offer several shots.
Some of these are actually rejected, and all of them should be! They were rejected because they are just too over-the-top. We know that. We know how barf-a-rama they are, how vomitrocious, how revolting, but we also have no problems pouring the shots a reader knocks back, by nose or mouth.
You have the details of how this all came to be. Like so many years ago, I’m daring the forbidden and I can only say, the devil made me do it.
The devil is in the details, in the tequila, and in the stories, my friend.
I am all over the horror writing scene as a writer, an editor, opinion-giver, and more. I watch trends and try to predict them, but at no time have there ever been so many variables.  Some may feel we are zombie/vamp swamped, but while those are still favorite topics, there are so many more sub-genres than ever before.  It reminds me of the 60s-70s influx of new horror.
There is some badly written material, I agree, but there is just as much badly written horror from those who are with huge presses as those who self-publish.  I don’t see the difference except for the ones who are getting paid enormous sums for schlock.  I also don’t want to talk about the B-horror/ commercial writing (that many of us have done to support the other writing we wish to do).  I want to talk about the rest.  I want to talk about the ones that are tequila-up-the nose good.
I prefer these, actually.  Why? Again, some are bad, some are B-list, and so on, but I like those that are spot-on, well written, and brutal.  They get a bad reputation because they often contain explicit sex (and sex is so bad, right?), and because they have gore, and because of the unconventional, profane themes.
That is the real kicker.  The other elements, we can set aside, and maybe complain about, but the themes are what bother us.  Extreme horror magnifies the themes.  I love the subtlety of The Lottery or in Frankenstein; I get the social and personal over tones, but sometimes… there are times I want to snort the tequila.
Several other presses have rejected these that I am offering.  Why? Oh, the theme mainly, if the publisher is perceptive.  If the one who read it was not as deep thinking, then the stories were tossed back for the content (sex, gore, language).  I get amused; I get scared.  That is, I get amused and scared when I read the stories and when I consider the fact that I am going to release them.
Some won’t get there.  A few will get it, and they will love these pieces.  They will get the message behind the horror.
 I get it.  I really get it.  Get the devil and the tequila both.  I know what the author is truly saying.  I get the real message of sheer terror that is hidden in gossamer layers and tied with silken bows.  These stories really scare me.  They really are, at times, like snorting that tequila.  They hurt.
I like the trend, but not everyone does or will.  It’s way too much for some.  Unfortunately, some very smart readers will refuse to read this type of story when the pieces are secretly written for the most intelligent of readers.  It’s a subgenre that kicks those that it is aimed at, but isn’t that the idea? Kick and hit? Gut-punch and eviscerate?
Horror will always be fun and have the B-list, commercial fun stuff; it will always deliver the books that are excellent, classic, and literary, but there is room for a new sub-genre.  There is a place for the intelligently profane.  It may take a while to be recognized for brilliancy, but it is strong in a (fitting, very apt) hidden subculture of writers and readers.  It’s the Jimi Hendrix, the Kurt Cobain, Elvis, Jim Morrison, and the Janis Joplin of the literary world.  They were once considered “dangerous to the youth” and only admired by a few.  Today, they are viewed as revolutionary.  Motown was once thought to be a bad influence.  None of those musical giants harmed music; they changed it for the better.
I feel the intellectual profane horror will do the same.  It will take a while, but in time, names we may not know now (Goforth, Misura, Fisher, Johnson, Dabrowski, Woods, Pratt, and more) will be whispered about.  They will be called revolutionary or so emulated that they may be forgotten, but I am thrilled to say I was there.  No, I didn’t get to see Hendrix play live at Woodstock, but I am getting to see a few as they begin the revolution, and to me, brother, that is big time.
Horror is a’changin’.
And the best part, is, I get it.  And I am there this time.
Give me the tequila.  It’s time for a snort.

(catt 2014)


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There is zomething about zombies!

9/23/2014

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     What is it about the undead we love so much? Since George Romero wrote the rules for zombification, we have had a love affair with the shamblers, the running mad men, and the decaying dudes. 
     Romero always indicated that his movies were about far more than a bunch of zombies and indeed, he explored racial situations, crowd behavior, and social tension. Infamously the message "they are us. We are them" has been the underlying theme. We wonder what it is like to lose the familial connections, our sense of morality, and sense of self. That scares us. We don't want to be "like that" and yet, as much as we fear it and fear it happening to those we love, we are also drawn to it. 
    I think we love to watch zombies because they are the ultimate in adversaries. They look like us, but they are the enemy. Zombies can't think, and yet, they are a worthy opponent. They have weight, they have no fear, they feel no pain, and they feel no remorse or sympathy. They are us, but without the human parts. They are the antithesis of what people are and yet...they look like us, with a little rot and ruin for fun.
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Try R J Spears and begin the saga...or read Sam Gregory's version of a zombie filled world. Dan Williams chills with 4 novels featuring Mace, a man determined to save everyone he loves and to serve a little justice.
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The Freaks come out at night!
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Smooth...a watery world filled with flesh eaters...and a "must have" zombie book for children and adults both. ABCs of Zombie Friendship.
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Blood Suckers and more....

9/15/2014

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Amanda Lyons:  Grab the first book because there are sequels about to be released. Join the epic journey into Lyons' poetic, dark world.

William Bove:  A fresh, intelligent take on vampires; no sparkles here, but  instead, find the harsh realities of the blood sucking life.

catt dahman: Vampires in the old west battle Doc Holliday, Wyatt Earp and more legends. OR  Helen of Sparta and Troy was beautiful, and enslaved by an ancient curse of blood desires.

Ed Cardillo: See why he is a leading author of horror in Feral Hearts, a smart, sexy take that is unique. Ed edits and leads in a book with six odd, memorable characters on a singles trip, that find the vampires are after them! catt dahman, Amanda Lyons, Ed Cardillo, Michael Fisher, Jim Goforth, and Mark Woods join to provide six terrifying endings. Pick your poison!
Purchase
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Christopher St. John Sampayo is originally from Louisiana and currently lives in San Antonio, Texas. In 2005 his first play "Passing Through Sam's" was performed by the Renaissance Guild of San Antonio. Since then his plays "Last Son of the South," "Paper Heroes," and "The Artistic Merits of Crayons," have all been performed for the stage as well as many others. "Children of Rosehaven" is his first novel.

Essel Pratt is from Mishawka, Indiana, a North Central town near the Michigan Border. His prolific writings have graced the pages of multiple anthologies, a couple self-published works, as well as his own creations.

As a husband, a father, and a pet owner, Essel's responsibilities never end. Other than a family man, he works a full time job an hour from his home, he is a writer for the Inquisitr, a full time student on his journey to a degree - while maintaining a 4.0 GPA, and is also the Chief of Acquisitions and Executive Assistant for J. Ellington Ashton Press. His means of relieving stress and relaxing equate to sitting in front of his dual screens and writing the tales within the recesses of his mind.

Inspired by C.S. Lewis, Clive Barker, Stephen King, Harper Lee, William Golding, and many more, Essel doesn't restrain his writings to straight horror. His first Novel, Final Reverie is more Fantasy/Adventure, but does include elements of Horror. His first zombie book, The ABC's of Zombie Friendship, attacks the zombie genre from an alternate perspective. Future books, that are in progress and yet to be imagined, will explore the blurred boundaries of horror within its competing genres, mixing the elements into a literary stew.

You can follow Essel at the following:

www.facebook.com/esselprattwriting

Esselpratt.blogspot.com

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Catch Alex....

9/9/2014

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Alex S Johnson, Editor for Wetworks, an imprint of JEA, is busy with projects. Catch him if you can, but be careful what you wish for...his mind dwells in the darkest corners.
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Wetworks...when horror just can't handle a story, and splatterpunk pales beside. Sex, gore, offensive topics with brilliant writing, memorable characters, and scared-to-death descriptions...and did we mention gore? Yeah...that's Wetworks.
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Sexy....sexy horror...

8/21/2014

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Lace 21
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Click covers to buy

When Stacey meets her new boss she knows she has to have him, no matter what the cost. Stacey's not the kind of girl to take no for an answer, and what she wants she almost always gets. Things start to turn sour, however, once she's had her wicked way with him, as Stacey begins to get a glimpse of the man behind the mask. When an opportunity arises for Stacey to get one over on her boss, Stacey embraces it in both hands, broadening her horizons in the process. One way or another, Stacey is determined to seek out satisfaction.

A fallen angel, beautiful and horrendous, explores his earthly desires and knows no bounds. A special offering to him finds his wings fascinating and his methods less than cruel as she seduces him and is seduced. When she breaks through his rough exterior, lust and love follow in an erotic storm. Part of the LORE collection, Christopher Goose explores seduction and the power of sexual attraction in this rated X romp with a monster. Over 18 only.

Wetworks
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Coming soon...
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Six young people from different walks of life embark on a singles’ tour in Derosso, Italy, only to encounter a strip club in town that preys upon the men. Warned to stay away by their guide, two of the tourists give in to their curiosity and encounter the undead exotic dancers within. Lured by promises of untold carnal pleasures, these lonely hearts invite disaster on their group and the rest of the town. Wild and erotic, 
manipulative and vicious, these feral vampires are not at all romantic…they’re predators. Six different characters and six different endings, this tale is not for the faint of heart.   It is only for Feral Hearts.
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Ideas for Reading

8/12/2014

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What to read? Maybe a new catt dahman book...it's a weird western...Doc Holliday and the boys fight blood suckers when they aren't involved in gun fights. Try Wild Boys.  Maybe you want a top seller like Mark Woods' Fish story. Missing zombies? Get After and entertain yourself until the return of THE WALKING DEAD. Oh a chill is what you like? Try Amanda's book and you will feel haunted.

How about some Fantasies? These have great reviews and  will thrill!
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6 Authors. 6 Characters. 6 Endings. Get the ending that YOU want! It's a sexy, scary, unusual book.
"This review is from: Feral Hearts (Kindle Edition) Scary and bloody and with some crazy vampire erotica through out.... this is a pretty cool story and I love how each author contributes an initial character sketch and background. Fabulous. The endings were awesome, too. I enjoyed each one. I am hard pressed to pick my favorite. Another winner by Mr. Cardillo and the other writers! Great job!"


Have a look at our books and use the handy catalog or go to Amazon.com for ebooks an print! 
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Feeling Feral?

7/30/2014

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Six young people from different walks of life embark on a singles' tour in Derosso, Italy, only to encounter a strip club in town that preys upon the men. Warned to stay away by their guide, two of the tourists give in to their curiosity and encounter the undead exotic dancers within. Lured by promises of untold carnal pleasures, these lonely hearts invite disaster on their group and the rest of the town. Wild and erotic, 
manipulative and vicious, these feral vampires are not at all romantic...they're predators. 
Six different characters and six different endings, this tale is not for the faint of heart. 
It is only for Feral Hearts.
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Who? 
Edward Cardillo: award winning author of the I am Automaton series. 

Michael Fisher: author of soon-to-be-released DC's Dead.
Amanda Lyons: of Wendy Won't Go fame.
Mark Woods: the brains behind Time of Tides.
Jim Goforth: the writer of hot seller, Plebs.
catt dahman: author of Z is for Zombie series.


These authors also appear in anthologies, have more books and novellas available, and will have stories in the upcoming REJECTED For Content anthology. Prolific on their own, they have teamed up for this new, unusal type of horror novel.

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This book is fun for many reasons. It is horror. And Edward Cardillo edited it, so there is a great, smart story here, but that's when it all gets crazy. Ed gave us this situation and had us develop characters. Not too bad. He wove them together in the middle and then taxed us with writing endings that included all the characters. Big challenge. I was impressed with my fellow authors and how each went a totally different way than I went, as far as ending the same story we were all a part of! It is a real testament to the talent of these writers that they came up with such diverse stories. (catt)

Cover art by Michael Fisher
JEA Books
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JEA

7/8/2014

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     JEA began long ago, but we started releasing books a little over a year ago. I may view the press business all wrong, but I see it this way: you can doll yourself up for the prom, snap a picture, and look amazing, and that is wonderful. You can also get your hair done at a salon, get a fancy outfit, and have professional photos made. Which will look better? The second choice. Does that make you have more fun at the prom? No.  It's the way I see presses. Some of the (big 5) really do amazing things but you are never promised a lot of money and a career. It's a gamble that few are able to accept.
     JEA isn't huge and we can't promise a big career either but instead of letting our writers go out half-dressed, we do provide edits, fantastic covers, advice, PR, sales avenues, and more. We;ll make you look good for the prom. We will give each person support and the ability to have a voice in what happens to their manuscript. I think we are the the happy medium between a big press deal and going out there alone.
   
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This is a planned JEA antho for those authors who have content that is so over the top, so disgusting and gross, that that it is not fit for normal consumption! All authors and JEA authors are invited to sub.
Cover by FISH
click for more information
Writer don't get rich (automatically), but I have always wondered at those who chase the Big 5 endlessly, and who refuse to go with a small press. Jim Goforth and Mark Woods are two of our authors who are beginning to sell well. Neither have been able to buy a fancy mansion yet, but guess what?  These writers know people are enjoying something that they have written, they do get paychecks, and they are "branding" their names. Maybe I am old fashioned, but I can't understand going for the "big win" without having first worked the trenches and learned the entire craft. I respect those who disagree. I am just pleased that people buy, read our authors, and enjoy some great stories. Isn't that what writing is really about? If our goal is to all land the Big 5 deals and be rich, then I think 99.99% are going to be waiting a very long time. Meanwhile, we think we have some books that are as good or better than what the biggest presses are releasing.
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This may be every bit as fun as Harry Potter!
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One of the strongest "coming of age" books available.
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Alternate history with more wit than expected.
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Hey Big 5! We think we can compete.

click to find a book

PLEBS (Jim Goforth)



Corey Somerset, Tim Hayworth and Lee Hunter have had one hell of a good night.
And it isn't over yet.
Celebrating their friend's birthday with drunken debauchery and intoxicated antics they've just stumbled through a mini-wave of mindless vandalism and though they've wandered far out of the realms of civilization they are keen to keep the party vibe going.
When they encounter a band of mysterious fugitive women who call a bizarre encampment deep in the woods their residence it appears a strong likelihood that continuing the party is on the cards.
But it won't come without a price.
The collective of unnerving lawless women are open to the suggestion but not without the threesome completing a request first, a seemingly straight forward barter proposition that will bring the boys face to face with something else that dwells in an unorthodox co-existence with the girls in the wilderness.
These are the Plebs and the shocking violent encounter the trio are unwittingly pitched into with these freakish feral fiends may be their first but it won't be the last.
As the shiftless young men become inextricably entwined and involved with the agenda driven dangerous women so too do their fates, with them unravelling killer secrets, duplicity, bloodshed and brutality along the way that encompasses not just them but more of their friends, new enemies and old enemies.
A simple night of bad decisions escalates and snowballs into an expedition of terror spanning all the way home and beyond with Corey and his friends engulfed in a nightmare where the lines between man and monster blur.
Depravity, death and destruction reign supreme and it isn't just the Plebs that want them all torn limb from limb.
Purchase
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The Walking Dead...

7/3/2014

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won't return for a while.

Fans are eagerly awaiting the new season. We all want to know how the characters will get out of the latest situation, what the new place is all about, and how will the others favorites catch up to their friends. So much fun! Until then, how about a good zombie book to read?
Mace Series
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In San Francisco, a deadly toxin is released. Within hours it s consumes the entire Bay Area. A small group of survivors, travel through a gauntlet of raging corpses, battling their inner demons and each other along the way.

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Eight months ago the world turned upside-down in the most horrifying way. The dead came back to life and started killing the living. Within weeks, zombies ruled the world. In a small southern Ohio town, Joel, a twenty-something underachiever finds himself holed up with a group of survivors as they take refuge in a church. 

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Beside the still water...the zombies roam.
A slightly different take on the zombie genre,Smooth asks if the world be better if we were all neutral and complacent (without violence, greed, hatred, and yes, love and compassion) in our personalities? The town of Cold Springs is about to receive the gift of full serenity and some people intend to fight it (as well as the zombies) all the way to the end!
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So you think you know how the world ends? Think again! With Piercing Undead, T.L.Decay offers an alternative look at a very different apocalypse scenario. Tom and Melisa return from a week long camping trip to discover a world very different from the one they left behind. Narrowly escaping the claws of the undead, they find themselves at a local Race track where they meet fellow survivors. And it is here that they begin to realize that, in order to stay one step ahead of the piercing claws of death, they need to band together in order to survive..

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    Halloween
    Horror
    I Sea Monsters
    JEAPERS
    J Ellington Ashton
    J Ellington Ashton
    Jeremy Dick
    Jim Goforth
    Jim Goforth
    Joe Hill
    Josh Hilden
    Keith Milstead
    Keith Milstead
    Lisa Marie Lamb
    Lycanthroship
    Mace
    Mark Woods
    Mark Woods
    Mark Woods
    Max Booth
    Michael Fisher
    Michael Kanuchel
    Midnight Remains
    Midnight Riders
    Mystery
    Naomi Matthews
    Odd Tales Of An Old Man
    Paul Copeland
    Paul Copeland
    Pete Clark
    Pete Clark
    Piercing Undead
    Plebs
    Poetry
    Press
    Publishing
    Randy Spears
    Randy Spears
    Rejected For Content
    Richard Laymon
    Romance
    Roy C. Booth
    Roy C. Booth
    Samantha Gregory
    Sam Reese
    Sci Fi
    Sci-fi
    Scotty Schrier
    Sea Monsters
    Sea Monsters
    Sexy
    Sharon Higa
    Sharon Higa
    Silent Heart
    Stuart Drake
    Susan Simone
    Susan Simone
    Tabitha Baumander
    Texas Frightmare
    The One: Children Of Destiny
    The Pond
    Time Of Tides
    Tim Long
    T L Decay
    T L Decay
    Under A Twisted Moon
    Vampires
    Warriors
    Wendy Won't Go
    William Bove
    William Bove
    William Jeffrey Patus
    William J Patus
    Young Adult
    Zombies

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