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Before Dawn: Book 2 - Bad Blood In Lobo Cliff | by Rod Martinez Feb. 08, 2012 | $5.99 | 31126 words | Sample 15% |
| Author bio: Rod Martinez was born in and grew up in Tampa, Florida and was attracted to words at an early age. He wrote his first book “The Boy Who Liked To Read†(about himself) with construction paper and pencil in the first grade on his own – wasn’t a class assignment. His teacher then decided to keep the masterpiece and show other students in class what they could do if they applied themselves. Later in life, aside from multiple trips to the public and school libraries, Rod discovered Comic Books and was determined to work for Stan Lee once he was old enough. As a student in school he was drawn to reading, writing and drawing and by high-school had completed several comic books of his own creation. It was his Creative Writing teacher in his senior year that pulled him aside and told him “You should delve into short story writing, give the comic books a rest.†Writing short stories next came natural, it was like telling a story – but using words hands instead of pictures. Within a few years he’d have several short stories done and pursued publishing, but not with the vigor most writers had, he wrote for the love of it and liked to share his photocopied stories with friends and family. It wasn’t until adulthood that he got serious about writing. The next step, of course was to try and write a novel, which proved a VERY fun task. A novel was the embodiment of a comic book in prose form. “Writing a story is like sitting in front of a stage and watching the performers direct me. I have a basic idea of the storyline, but the characters take over and I’m just their tool.†Rod confesses. In his spare time he spends lots of time on the internet, or reading, or writing his short stories, novels and comic book scripts or in his music studio built into his garage – the room he also does his writing in and the place referred to as “the other woman†by his wife. Of course, when he can - he spends time with his wife and son. |
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Double Drop | by Howard Hurtt Feb. 08, 2012 | $3.00 | 66540 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Howard Hurtt has worked as a submarine chaser, biologist, aerospace tech writer, and rehab technologist. He has been a caver since 1964 and a cave research volunteer since 1980. His published books include Double Drop, sequel Wrap Three Pull Two, and scifi series Last Earthman, of which GogAi, the first installment, is available in print and ebook. He lives with his wife and children in Fresno, California. |
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Eyetooth | by J.L. Hugh Feb. 08, 2012 | $0.99 | 5633 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: J.L. writes from a tropical paradise and enjoys writing creative erotic adventure stories. |
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Return to Ocracoke | by T.L. Peters Feb. 08, 2012 | $0.99 | 26987 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: "There's no question that Peters is a master wordsmith." Gerry B's Book Reviews About the author: T.L. Peters is an ex-lawyer who enjoys playing the violin and giving his dog long walks in the woods. In between, he writes novels. |
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The Shadow Government | by Ray Derby Feb. 08, 2012 | $2.99 | 88435 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: The author has been deemed an expert on chemical, biological, and radiological (CBR) personal protection in the emergency management field, holding positions as a Civil Defense Director, a Civilian Disaster Preparedness Officer for the U.S. Air Force and as a Federal Emergency Coordinator. During his career, he provided CBR expertise and support to five U.S. Presidents. |
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Guns and Dolls | by Luigi Pagano Feb. 08, 2012 | $1.99 | 4909 words | Sample 30% |
| Author bio: Luigi Pagano Born in Italy, moved to England in 1961 . He is married, has two daughters and lives in Handforth, Cheshire. Having dabbled in writing in his native country, he decided to resume this activity, as a hobby, on his retirement. He has published two collections of poems: one in 2005 entitled ‘Idle Thoughts’ (now out of print) and a second one in 2008 called ‘Reflections’. He is a member of I*D Writers Group based in Shotton, Flintshire. His work has been featured in various magazines and anthologies. A regular contributor to the websites ABCtales.com and UKAuthors.co.uk, he was ‘Writer of the Month’ on the latter in December 2005. |
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Murders by Midnight | by Mitch Dagen Feb. 08, 2012 | $2.99 | 29539 words | Sample 15% |
| Author bio: Michel Dagenais graduated from Rosemount High School in 1976 with a simple High School Diploma. For the past 32 years he has worked for Canada Post in Montreal. He will be retiring in 2 years. He took a few creative writing courses plus a Fundamentals of Fiction course. He started writing this novel in 1993 and has just got around finishing it. This is Michel’s first published book. Michel lives in Montreal. |
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The Interrogator (The David Morrell Short Fiction Collection #3) | by David Morrell Feb. 08, 2012 | $0.99 | 10720 words | Sample 5% |
| Author bio: DAVID MORRELL David Morrell is the award-winning author of First Blood, the novel in which Rambo was created. He was born in 1943 in Kitchener, Ontario, Canada. In 1960, at the age of seventeen, he became a fan of the classic television series, Route 66, about two young men in a Corvette convertible traveling the United States in search of America and themselves. The scripts by Stirling Silliphant so impressed Morrell that he decided to become a writer. In 1966, the work of another writer (Hemingway scholar Philip Young) prompted Morrell to move to the United States, where he studied with Young at the Pennsylvania State University and received his M.A. and Ph. D. in American literature. There, he also met the esteemed science-fiction author William Tenn (real name Philip Klass), who taught Morrell the basics of fiction writing. The result was First Blood, a ground-breaking novel about a returned Vietnam veteran suffering from post-trauma stress disorder who comes into conflict with a small-town police chief and fights his own version of the Vietnam War. That “father†of modern action novels was published in 1972 while Morrell was a professor in the English department at the University of Iowa. He taught there from 1970 to 1986, simultaneously writing other novels, many of them international bestsellers, including the classic spy trilogy, The Brotherhood of the Rose (the basis for a top-rated NBC miniseries that premiered after a Super Bowl), The Fraternity of the Stone, and The League of Night and Fog. Eventually wearying of two professions, Morrell gave up his academic tenure in order to write full time. Shortly afterward, his fifteen-year-old son Matthew was diagnosed with a rare form of bone cancer and died in 1987, a loss that haunts not only Morrell’s life but his work, as in his memoir about Matthew, Fireflies, and his novel Desperate Measures, whose main character lost a son. “The mild-mannered professor with the bloody-minded visions,†as one reviewer called him, Morrell is the author of thirty-three books, including such high-action thrillers as The Naked Edge, Creepers, and The Spy Who Came for Christmas (set in Santa Fe, New Mexico, where he lives). Always interested in different ways to tell a story, he wrote the six-part comic-book series, Captain America: The Chosen. His writing book, The Successful Novelist, analyzes what he has learned during his four decades as an author. Morrell is a co-founder of the International Thriller Writers organization. Noted for his research, he is a graduate of the National Outdoor Leadership School for wilderness survival as well as the G. Gordon Liddy Academy of Corporate Security. He is also an honorary lifetime member of the Special Operations Association and the Association of Intelligence Officers. He has been trained in firearms, hostage negotiation, assuming identities, executive protection, and car fighting, among numerous other action skills that he describes in his novels. To research the aerial sequences in The Shimmer, he became a private pilot. Morrell is an Edgar and Anthony nominee as well as a three-time recipient of the distinguished Stoker Award from the Horror Writers Association. The International Thriller Writers organization gave him its prestigious ThrillerMaster Award. With eighteen million copies in print, his work has been translated into twenty-six languages. |
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The Mephisto Mysteries | by Terence O'Grady Feb. 08, 2012 | $2.99 | 55942 words | Sample 25% |
| Author bio: A musicologist by profession, I've written a music-themed mystery (The Mephisto Mysteries) about an international piano competition and the mysterious power of a manuscript score by the legendary Franz Liszt, as well as a handful of children’s books in a variety of genres. |
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The Horseman at Midnight | by Jameson Parker Feb. 08, 2012 | $2.99 | 63071 words | Sample 8% |
| Author bio: http://www.readjamesonparker.com/ Jameson Parker was a working actor for over a quarter of a century. While he has appeared in countless movies, television movies, and plays, he is best known for his starring role as A.J., one half of the team of Simon & Simon, the long running hit television series in the ‘80’s. After Hollywood, Jameson became the host of several different hunting shows, including American Hunter, The World of Ducks Unlimited, Sports Afield on Assignment, Beretta’s Bird Hunter’s Journal, and A Dog’s Life, which he also wrote and produced. Jameson has been a freelance writer for almost twenty years. As an actor-turned-author he is unique because his work has appeared in such a wide range of outdoor magazines: American Hunter, Sports Afield, Gray’s Sporting Journal, California Waterfowl, Shooting Sportsman, Bugle, Under Wild Skies, Delta Waterfowl, Ducks Unlimited, Safari, Western Horseman, and currently he is the ‘Sporting Life’ columnist for Sporting Classics, and the ‘Fine Guns’ columnist for Texas Sporting Journal. Jameson is the author of the critically acclaimed memoir, An Accidental Cowboy (Thomas Dunne Books/St. Martins Press) and the editor of To Absent Friends (Willow Creek Press), an anthology of stories about dogs. He is married to actress and singer Darleen Carr. |
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Prosper Snow Series | by Shaun Jeffrey Feb. 08, 2012 | $4.49 | 163883 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Shaun Jeffrey was brought up in a house in a cemetery, so it was only natural for his prose to stray towards the dark side when he started writing. He has had three novels published, 'The Kult', 'Deadfall' and 'Evilution, and one collection of short stories, 'Voyeurs of Death'. Among his other writing credits are short stories published in Cemetery Dance, Surreal Magazine, Dark Discoveries and Shadowed Realms. The Kult was optioned for film by Gharial Productions. |
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When Gods Fail | by Nelson Lowhim Feb. 08, 2012 | $3.99 | 26340 words | Sample 15% |
| Author bio: Nelson Lowhim was born in Tanzania where he lived for the first decade of his life. He then moved to India for a year before settling in the U.S. in the state of Michigan. He spent some of his formative years hitchhiking and hiking around the great state of Alaska. From there he joined the Army and served for seven years as an Infantryman in 1st AD then as an Engineer in Fifth Group. After his time in the Military—which included many travels through Europe and the MIddle East—he came to New York and earned an undergraduate degree from Columbia University. He currently lives with his girlfriend in the Bronx. You can visit his blog at: http://nelsonlowhim.blogspot.com/ |
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Fat Chance | by Malla Duncan Feb. 08, 2012 | $1.99 | 66699 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Born and bred in Cape Town, South Africa, I have been writing since the age of eight. I have a BA degree in Psychology and Communications and my career encompasses creative copywriting in advertising. My short stories have been published in local magazines (winning two competitions along the way). I now focus on novels, writing well-paced chick chillers with good doses of mystery and suspense, as well as fantasy novels for children. Over years of practice, I hope that I have managed to hone a style that is spare, well-paced and hopefully, gripping. I enjoy a plot unraveled, a twist in the tail. I write about flawed, ordinary women who are caught in extraordinary circumstances. Their reactions in these situations are always fascinating because each character approaches problems differently. It's the factor of the unexpected that I like. That's what keeps me writing. Catchee Monkey is a dark, twisted romantic thriller about revenge. A devious and disturbing read that weaves its puzzle right to the end. Dark Sanctuary is a study of obsession, the shocking revelation of madness in the heart of a family. An intriguing read with plenty of suspense to keep those pages turning! Deep As Bone presents my favourite character, Ilsa Joubert. Ilsa has a darkness in her that I find compelling. This story is not only about the revelation of murder, but also about the bitter legacy an unhappy childhood can leave us. The Vampire Castle is a quirky, spooky story that that builds as much humor as it does fright. Part of the The Shadow Garden series, it begins the extraordinary adventures of Elspeth as she journeys to discover her true identity. One of my passions in life is to produce more literature in English for African children. Fluency in English is key to economic advancement. So take a look at Miki and the Cricket Bat - and Miki and the Boxing Gloves, both fun family reads. I don't write 'down' to children. So the stories are simple but the language sophisticated enough to offer a real learning curve. Enjoy! |
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world of absolute evil | by itzhak begerano Feb. 07, 2012 | $8.00 | 91059 words | Sample 20% |
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Late | by Monica P Feb. 07, 2012 | $1.00 | 1852 words | Sample 15% |
| Author bio: This author has been writing for around thirteen years. She began with poetry, and expanded into the field of creative writing. Despite the fact that creative writing is her main focus, she has also expanded into non-fiction writing. |
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Betrayed - Alternate Ending | by Wodke Hawkinson Feb. 07, 2012 | $0.99 | 23610 words | Sample 5% |
| Author bio: Wodke Hawkinson is the name under which writing duo PJ Hawkinson and K Wodke produce their co-authored works. Both PJ and Karen have published solo works as well. |
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Private Purgatory | by Helen Denkha Feb. 07, 2012 | $3.99 | 76851 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: I was born in Tehran-Iran to Assyrian parents and spent the first few years of my life travelling all around the country, wherever my father’s job took us. My first 2 years of schooling were completed in four different towns, with the summer holidays yet in another town. It was an idyllic childhood, though I was too young to appreciate the significance of seeing so much of the country in such a short time. The family eventually returned to Tehran and remained there until we migrated to Australia. I went to a school a few minutes away from our house, close enough to bring my friends home for lunch. I was a very popular girl at school but in hindsight I believe it may have been more my mother’s cooking than my vibrant personality that won me so many friends. My love of reading fiction had already begun much to my mother’s dismay. She was determined that I, my younger sister Madeline and younger brother Ramin should get a good tertiary education but my preference for reading serialised fiction in magazines and novels given to me by my older cousins was not her idea of suitable literature. One of my most treasured books was bought from what I now realise must have been a second hand book shop (judging by the fact that my pocket money was enough to pay for the book). At the age of nine I walked into the shop and started browsing with the intention of spending the rest of the afternoon in the shop. The store owner kept insisting that I buy something from the children’s section and pointed out a few books and magazines, one of them being the Iranian version of Mad Magazine. In desperation I picked up the first book nearest to me in paid for it and left. It was a thick book and I used to think that any book with a lot of pages must be good. This one was okay, a funny sort of love story. Years later in Australia when I re-read the book I realised the book I had bought from the second hand book shop was Rebecca by Daphne Du Murier. In contrast to the early school years, my first year at school in Sydney was an absolute nightmare. I could not speak, read or write English and for the first few months refused to speak to anyone except my special English teacher for the fear that I would say the wrong thing and be laughed at. My refusal to speak or take any part in the conversations around me had one positive effect; I had no choice but to listen to the teachers. As a result I learnt English quicker than expected and for the next four years wrote several essays and short stories which were rated first in the class. I completed years 11 and 12 in a Technical college. There was a course available that allowed the final two years to be completed in the same year. I was anxious to leave school and join the work force. Looking back I think that my eagerness to join the workforce may have been the result of a mild form of temporary insanity. There were however two positive points in going to the college, one that it was co-ed and the other, that the students did not have to wear a school uniform. I gave up my earlier ambition of becoming a teacher, having seen first hand (and been slightly terrified of) how some of the teachers were treated by students. I accidentally drifted into the finance industry and have remained there ever since. My favourite city in the world is Sydney ‘The Princess Down Under’ with the Gold Coast a close second. I admit this is a rather biased opinion because apart from a trip to Hawaii and several interstate trips around Australia I have spent most of my life in Sydney. However I believe any city that is the custodian of one’s teenage memories, good or bad, will be difficult to forget. Seeing my first book in print was a bitter sweet experience. It is an absolute thrill to see the final result of one’s creation. I’m sure that painters, designers and actors feel the same. My only regret was that in dedicating the book to my family, my father, sister and brother’s names were up the top but for my mother it could only be dedicated to her memory. |
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The End-time Evangelist | by David J. Hegarty Feb. 07, 2012 | $2.99 | 99047 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: David Hegarty wrote his first novel in High School, mostly in the back of science class, because science was boring. His favourite authors include John Irving, Robert Jordan, George RR Martin, Robin Hobb and Terry Pratchett. Although Tolstoy and Dostoyevsky are good too ...! |
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Eternal Struggle | by TJ Converse Feb. 07, 2012 | $4.99 | 47099 words | Sample 15% |
| Author bio: Born in Raised in Florida. Writing stories and music was always a passion for TJ. She wrote her first story at the age of thirteen. TJ studied vampire folklore as a child and thought what it would be like to write a story based nothing of what people believed of vampires. So Eternal Struggle was born. |
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Genome Solution: Book 2 (Sci Fi Virtual Suspense / Thriller) | by Joseph Veramu Feb. 07, 2012 | $1.99 | 14575 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: I have always been interested in writing and had my first story published when I was 17. Since then, I have published in a number of genres. This include science fiction, children's stories, young adult fiction and non fiction. One of my novels was translated into German. I have worked as a university professor and for the United Nations Development Program.I studied at USP and the London South Bank University. In my free time I help out with young people's programs for the YWAM / PTC and SU |
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In the Grip of the City | by SK Davis Feb. 07, 2012 | You set the price! | 106943 words | Sample 10% |
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Spooky Stories - A series of ghost, haunting & thought provoking short stories | by Don Hale Feb. 07, 2012 | $3.00 | 10243 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: A former British investigative journalist and author of several books on true crime, crime novels, historical books, sports. |
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The Broken Time Machine | by Arul Das Feb. 07, 2012 | $5.49 | 10565 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Arul Amaladas is shortly called as Arul Das was born in (18.06.1990)Sattur,India. I make things up and write them down.I am always fond of reading newspapers and historical humor books.This made me write short stories.Humor and romance stories are always my favourite. In my spare time I try to keep the maintain my owned website www.8secretsearchenginetricks.com more or less up to date. Among from writing short stories,writing script to short comedy dramas is my hobby. |
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No Another Song | by Arul Das Feb. 07, 2012 | $13.00 | 24957 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Arul Amaladas is shortly called as Arul Das was born in (18.06.1990)Sattur,India. I make things up and write them down.I am always fond of reading newspapers and historical humor books.This made me write short stories.Humor and romance stories are always my favourite. In my spare time I try to keep the maintain my owned website www.8secretsearchenginetricks.com more or less up to date. Among from writing short stories,writing script to short comedy dramas is my hobby. |
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The Struggle Knows Not | by Nelson Lowhim Feb. 07, 2012 | $5.99 | 51898 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Nelson Lowhim was born in Tanzania where he lived for the first decade of his life. He then moved to India for a year before settling in the U.S. in the state of Michigan. He spent some of his formative years hitchhiking and hiking around the great state of Alaska. From there he joined the Army and served for seven years as an Infantryman in 1st AD then as an Engineer in Fifth Group. After his time in the Military—which included many travels through Europe and the MIddle East—he came to New York and earned an undergraduate degree from Columbia University. He currently lives with his girlfriend in the Bronx. You can visit his blog at: http://nelsonlowhim.blogspot.com/ |
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Heart Stopper | by R J Samuel Feb. 07, 2012 | $4.99 | 83681 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: RJ Samuel is the pen name of the author, who lives and works in Galway, Ireland. She was born in 1967 in Nigeria to Indian parents. She left Nigeria in 1984 to study in Galway, Ireland and has remained in Galway since then, apart from a 3-year episode in the southwest of France. She is an Irish citizen and now considers herself almost Irish as well as almost Indian. She has been writing creatively for 6 years, excluding her period in France where she wrote nothing creative, probably because she was running a restaurantar despite having a background in Medicine (she is a qualified medical doctor) and IT (she has a Masters in IT) and absolutely no background in restaurants, apart from eating in them. Her story ‘Helmets’ was shortlisted for the 2011 Over the Edge ‘New Writer of the Year Competition’ and she was the only entrant to have both her fiction and her poetry long-listed for the Doire Press ‘1st Annual International Fiction and Poetry Chapbook Competition’ in January 2012. She is currently writing her second novel, Falling Colours, which is also set in Galway |
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Left Behind | by Jayton Young Feb. 06, 2012 | $4.99 | 51465 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: I've been thinking up stories since I was in high school, and when I mentioned in passing the idea of writing a book, my oldest son really got into it, encouraging me. Then he pulled in my daughter and youngest son to start bugging me, telling me I should really do it. I published my short stories as practice as I am working on two thrillers that will have a lot more detail. I've always enjoyed writing, and I'm hoping people will enjoy my works. |
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A Rogue by Compulsion | by SURAT VANITCHATCHWAL Feb. 06, 2012 | $2.99 | 110143 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: I'M A READER & NEW WRITER |
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The Kill Riff | by David J Schow Feb. 06, 2012 | $2.99 | 121403 words | Sample 20% |
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Shadowed | by Ken Hughes Feb. 06, 2012 | $7.99 | 87476 words | Sample 30% |
| Author bio: Ken Hughes has been living for storytelling since his father first read him The Wind In The Willows, and everything from Stephen King’s edge to Hayao Miyazaki’s sense of wonder has only fed that fire. He has worked as a technical writer in Los Angeles at positions from medical research to online gaming to mission proposals for a flight to Mars. For more about his stories, songs, and his Unified Writing Field Theory, see www.kenhughesauthor.com. |
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The Mystery Man Murders | by Jon Rieley-Goddard Feb. 06, 2012 | $5.99 | 163731 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: on Rieley-Goddard lives and works in Buffalo, New York, with his wife, Cathy, and their three cats, Chica, Bella, and Slava. He is a writer, photographer, and minister. Before embracing the call of the Word, he was man of many words -- a copy editor on daily newspapers. The Mystery Man Murders is his first novel. |
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Vivious Lives | by Ken James Feb. 06, 2012 | $2.99 | 256558 words | Sample 20% |
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Death of a Prosecutor | by Evan Slavitt Feb. 06, 2012 | $0.99 | 86435 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Evan Slavitt grew up on Cape Cod. He attended Phillips Exeter Academy and then went on to get a M.A. and B.A. from Yale in Economics. He attended Harvard Law School from 1979 to 1981, where he served as an editor of the Harvard Law Review. During law school, Mr. Slavitt taught courses in economics and two semester seminars in industrial organization. Upon graduation, he then found employment with the United States Department of Justice as a Trial Attorney for its Antitrust Division between 1981 and 1983 working in the Special Regulated Industries Section. Although a junior attorney, Mr. Slavitt prepared witnesses to testify and examined them at trial; drafted motions and interrogatories; took depositions; and wrote legislative and regulatory comments in the fields of banking, securities law, and communications. From 1983 to 1986, Evan Slavitt served as an Assistant U.S. Attorney, litigating over 200 cases in a wide range of areas, from the environment to civil fraud, tort, health regulation, insurance, and eminent domain. In 1986, he was promoted to Deputy Chief of the Civil Division of the Office of the U.S. Attorney for the District of Massachusetts. In this capacity, Mr. Slavitt managed 12 attorneys, supervising litigation with an emphasis on environmental fraud and the False Claims Act, which provides penalties for fraud perpetrated by government contractors. In 1987, Evan Slavitt left the public sector to join the practice of Fine & Ambrogne in Boston as an Associate. He argued and briefed cases before both the state and federal appellate courts; he also handled every aspect of cases involving civil litigation and white-collar crime. With the expertise gained at the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Mr. Slavitt skillfully gave counsel on real estate development and environmental concerns. In 1990, he accepted a position as a Partner at Hinckley, Allen & Snyder, LLP, where he continued specializing in environmental law and white-collar criminal defense. He represented clients in grand jury proceedings and conducted internal investigations. He also served as a Partner with Gadsby Hannah, LLP, from 1997 to 2002, and at Bodoff and Slavitt, LLP, from 2003 to 2006. In 2006, Evan Slavitt became Director at The Colchester Group, LLC, a consulting firm which specializes in counseling businesses on crisis management and resolving internal disputes. The company also provides consultations on complex financial transactions, including Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganizations. Evan Slavitt currently serves as Vice President for Business and Legal Affairs at AVX Corporation in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, a manufacturing firm which is publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange. He handles civil matters, both internal and with outside entities. In this position, Mr. Slavitt deals with matters of international, environmental, and governmental investigations, as well as mergers and acquisitions. He is one of five senior executive team members, and also serves on the cash management committee. He also heads the corporate environmental, security, and reclamation departments, where he provides compliance training in those areas. |
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Year of the Slug | by James Cortese Feb. 06, 2012 | $6.50 | 52923 words | Sample 20% |
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the Cat's Dowry, a Jaguar Tale | by e.j. Springer Feb. 06, 2012 | $6.99 | 102593 words | Sample 20% |
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First Shot: 10 Stories | by Chris Well Feb. 06, 2012 | $2.99 | 40143 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Novelist Chris Well writes laugh-out-loud suspense and mystery fiction. An award-winning magazine writer and editor, Chris is the editor of FamilyFiction, a comprehensive website, weekly newsletter, and digital magazine for readers of Christian fiction. He and wife Erica create the weekly comic strip Best Mann For the Job, about a woman with a complicated past who returns home to Hope Falls, Tenn., to become the small town's new sheriff. He and Erica make their home in Tennessee. |
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Haunted House-Real Ghost Story | by Arul Das Feb. 06, 2012 | $5.49 | 12146 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Arul Amaladas is shortly called as Arul Das was born in (18.06.1990)Sattur,India. I make things up and write them down.I am always fond of reading newspapers and historical humor books.This made me write short stories.Humor and romance stories are always my favourite. In my spare time I try to keep the maintain my owned website www.8secretsearchenginetricks.com more or less up to date. Among from writing short stories,writing script to short comedy dramas is my hobby. |
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Euston | by Nicholas Jankovic Feb. 06, 2012 | $0.99 | 4693 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Nicholas Jankovic is an author or fiction and non-fiction who also enjoys adventures while standing in line. |
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Vigilante | by A Grant Feb. 06, 2012 | $4.99 | 151020 words | Sample 10% |
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Night Eyes - Twilight | by Dallas Releford Feb. 05, 2012 | $1.99 | 106369 words | Sample 20% |
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The Reverend | by Christamar Varicella Feb. 05, 2012 | $4.99 | 73937 words | Sample 20% |
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The Mary Jane Mission | by Daniel Wyatt Feb. 05, 2012 | $5.99 | 55614 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Historical fiction author Daniel Wyatt is Canadian, born and raised on the prairies of Saskatchewan. He now resides with his wife and two children in Burlington, Ontario, thirty miles outside Toronto. His first published work was a set of first-person stories from World War II allied air force veterans called Two Wings and a Prayer by Boston Mills Press, Erin, Ontario, Canada in 1984. This was followed up in 1986 by Maximum Effort with the same publisher. In 1990, Wyatt made the switch to historical fiction with The Last Flight of the Arrow, a techno-thriller set during the Cold War years of the late 1950's. Originally published by Random House of Canada, it sold 20,000 copies in paperback form. The Mary Jane Mission came out two years later, also by Random House. Wyatt's other published works include aviation magazine articles in Canada and the United States. The Last Flight of the Arrow has been re-released as an e-book by LTDBooks in Canada. A big baseball fan, Wyatt enjoys collecting Detroit Tigers memorabilia. In the summer months, he coaches a local fastball team. |
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Eleven: Science Fiction Stories | by Michael Canfield Feb. 05, 2012 | $4.99 | 46607 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Michael Canfield writes about monsters, superheroes, couples, babies, astronauts, paranoids, obsessives, and other people. He has published mystery, fantasy, science fiction, horror and just-plain-odd stories on fiction sites including StrangeHorizons, Spinetingler, EscapePod, Daily Science Fiction, in dead-tree magazines including Realms of Fantasy, Talebones, and Black Gate, and other places. "Super-Villains" was also republished in the prestigious Fantasy: The Year's Best series, edited by Rich Horton (Prime Books). Born in Las Vegas, he now lives, works, plays, writes, and watches television in Seattle and Los Angeles. |
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Threatened Love | by S.G. McKinley Feb. 05, 2012 | $5.95 | 15707 words | Sample 10% |
| Author bio: Sharon is a small town woman who has had a love for writing since she was in school. A friend talked her into trying her hand at public writing, and she found that she enjoys it. Sharon loves to share with the public a little insight into her live. She has a puppy named Moses, and a cat named Cloudy. |
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Murder with Mayhem | by S.G. McKinley Feb. 05, 2012 | $5.95 | 22450 words | Sample 10% |
| Author bio: Sharon is a small town woman who has had a love for writing since she was in school. A friend talked her into trying her hand at public writing, and she found that she enjoys it. Sharon loves to share with the public a little insight into her live. She has a puppy named Moses, and a cat named Cloudy. |
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Reprisal | by Rob Alexander Feb. 05, 2012 | $2.99 | 93322 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: I live in Devon, in the Southwest of England. I served with 9 Parachute Squadron, Royal Engineers in the 70’s. I then ran my own retail business for over a decade before going to university to become a qualified youth worker. Once qualified, I became an expedition leader and free-lance outdoor pursuits instructor taking groups to various countries around the world. More recently I was a climbing instructor at the Commando Training Centre, Royal Marines. |
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The Deadly Secret of Dr. Arcanum Lock's Evolutionary Spirit Project: A Bodacious Baby Boomer Escapade | by Sara Barton Feb. 05, 2012 | $3.99 | 37541 words | Sample 15% |
| Author bio: "Goodwill Ambassador for Family Care" -- Sara M. Barton trained as an educator and artist, worked in clinical settings with children and adults, and now develops family caregiver education. "I believe in family caregiving. The truth is love is never enough to get you through the experience. You also need tools to help you give the right kind of care and to avoid caregiver burnout. An educated caregiver is a care manager, with resources and support. Good family care is about making your loved one as active, independent, and comfortable as possible. It makes your job easier because your loved one is more engaged in the care plan. It's important for every caregiver to still maintain goals, hopes and dreams. You should never give up yourself completely to the care. Balance is key." |
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Blood Never Dries | by Fred Jay Gordon Feb. 05, 2012 | $0.99 | 124655 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: FRED JAY GORDON was born in the Bronx and lives in New York. He owned Pegasus, a red, 17-hand high ex-race horse he rode bareback and could jump five foot high fences. When Gordon was 16, he wrote and recorded a pop song, "Bye, Bye, She Cried," which was bought by Atlantic Records. He's swept warehouse floors and worked the delivery trucks for the Budweiser beer factory in Newark, NJ. He has a degree in English from UC Berkeley and received a scholarship from Columbia University in Film. At NBC Studios in New York, he worked as a Tour Guide and had to wear a paper collar, a skinny black tie, and a badge with a peacock. On Broadway, he helped cast and raise money for two smash hit musicals then worked as a salad boy and a waiter. His plays have been produced in NY, LA, Baltimore, etc, he's a member of the Ensemble Studio Theater, he's taught playwriting and English Literature as well as horse-back riding, appeared as a contestant on various tv game shows, walked the streets of Brooklyn as a city social worker, worked the graveyard shift in the Tombs in the prisons in downtown NYC, etc. He’s a PEN Award winner and was a resident writer at the Edward Albee Foundation in Montauk, NY. He has just finished a new novel, AN AMERICAN FABLE, and will soon publish BLOOD NEVER DRIES. Reviews of BENJAMIN GRABBED HIS GLICKEN AND RAN: from Library Journal: "One hopes BENJAMIN won't be dismissed as just another offbeat experimental novel. It is an exciting book!" from Publishers Weekly: "...Benjamin's personal story is wild, with an extraordinary made-up language and a pun-on-pun series of sentences... The novel builds to a strong, dramatic climax and the effect is chilling." from The Christian Science Monitor: "Like a child of Zeus sprung full grown from the head of their creator ... this novel has not received the attention it deserves... The novel is operating simultaneously on three planes and finally on a fourth. Benjamin as a character is oddly captivating ... virtuosic ... exacting descriptions of Benjamin's room, physical sensations, and emotions are like a zoom lens bringing one in intensely close to him. Benjamin says of his Mysteries: 'Words are only a small portion of my life... They are weak technicalities which fail... Words are only words. And besides, I lie a lot.' |
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The Last Generation | by Guy Singer Feb. 04, 2012 | $2.99 | 92622 words | Sample 15% |
| Author bio: I used to be cute once! Now I'm 56 and I live in Thailand. I've had an odd and varied life. I've held jobs varying from manager of a self-storage facility in London to owner of a small museum in Tennessee. I've lived in many places and enjoyed travelling around. Now I'm semi-retired and write to put a crust of bread on my plate. I have written many short stories and edited many newsletters and society publications. This is the first full-length novel I've attempted, and I hope it won't be the last. The one lesson I've learned from this is not to trust your characters. They really live. Let me quickly tell you the story of Doris, Logan's Mom. She started life in the first draft as a man. He simply answered the telephone, put the call from Mike through to Ronald McMurtry and exited the story. Then he demanded a larger part. Soon he became Doris, and had a speaking role. When Mike decided he wanted to talk to McMurtry, he went to the office and found Doris. I did not write her into that role, show wrote herself. Mike had to go back, re-write where he bought a bunch of flowers and meet her again. She did appreciate the flowers. After a bit, I found she had a 'son', and the character of Logan was born. He was not in the original draft at all. From that moment on, Logan's own role became central. You've read the result. However, I swear Doris and Logan wrote themselves into the book. It was not my doing. The characters live. They really do, and they grow with the story. I loved that. You may find some of them re-appear in later books. I have a story to write about Logan, if he'll let me, and by popular demand, there's the life of Tom in 33AD. He has a lot of travel to undertake despite the fact he's an old man. |
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Circle of Bones | by Christine Kling Feb. 04, 2012 | $3.99 | 148133 words | Sample 20% |
| Author bio: Christine Kling writes nautical suspense fiction. Her first four books SURFACE TENSION, CROSS CURRENT, BITTER END and WRECKERS' KEY were set in Florida and featured the female tug and salvage captain Seychelle Sullivan. Kling's short stories have appeared in Gulfstream Magazine and Miami Noir. These days she lives aboard her 33-foot sailboat Talespinner, and she has recently published her first stand-alone sailing thriller CIRCLE OF BONES. |
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