This weeks Featured Book – Do Unto Others by L.S. Burton

814yvS96ghL._SL1500_

 

Do Unto Others [Kindle Edition]

L.S. Burton

What truly survives the dust of time?

The Messenger wanders into town from out of the wastes carrying a message he’s suffered at great lengths to deliver. The people of Scanlon, the last surviving town in that part of the world, are very eager to hear what the man has to say about the people back east, who they’d given up for dead a long time ago. But when the Messenger isn’t sure if these are the people for whom his message was meant, the good people of Scanlon don’t take very kindly to his reluctance.

Excerpt

Bones came to his mind often. Bones poked from the ground everywhere. New bones were good for keeping a fire burning if they weren’t too dry. Old bones made good racket-makers when banged together, scaring away the scorpions and the less desperate dogs.

Beneath the sheets lay his skin. Beneath his skin lay his bones, bones of failure, bones of old ideas, bones that had loved and touched, brittle bones of despair. The twigs of his own bones were gaining more green under the sheets, below the skin.

In the darkness, standing naked before the window, he heard the lazy sleep cheeps of birds outside in the trees. Birds! Trees! Across the road, the neighbour’s window glowed with the wealth of a candle’s flame. Who was hiding inside that orange light? What were they doing? Reading? Talking? He wanted to know. He tried to imagine and could only picture them staring at the wall, counting the clocks of their breath. He’d forgotten all the things that people do.

All that good food in his belly. Too rich. Too much. Too quickly. But he’d kept it down, and could feel the strength storing in his arms and legs, and soon he’d want more. That was the problem with the human machine, constant refuelling to ensure smooth operation. It was inefficient, no better than a guttering fire down in the belly turning cogs and rotary teeth, keeping legs lifting, feet planting one after another in a forward motion, keeping bones reaching out for contact and solace and reason.

Lighting the lantern next to his bed, he resisted holding it up to make a mirror out of the black window. What if he saw an old man looking back at him, the dried skin under his chin turned to a hen’s wattle, the blue circling out of his eyes as if down a drain, splotches on his skin? What if he didn’t recognize himself at all?

Quietly he stole out of his room and descended the stairs, palm to the wall for support. The floor in the kitchen popped under his feet. The stove in the corner groaned in the shadows, remembering heat.

The night air called to him. The outside door was well oiled and didn’t squeak. He shut it softly and padded across the road in his bare feet to the neighbour’s yard. The grass protested gently as he walked, the ground no match for his hard and gnarled feet.

Drawn to the golden glow of the neighbours window, he stopped beneath the tree in the yard, suddenly afraid to look inside the window. People don’t do this sort of thing, peeping in windows. They let other people alone. More than that, he worried he might be better off not knowing what the neighbour was doing inside. Better to keep his innocent notions intact.

It struck him how open and vulnerable he was, standing before the golden window. He wondered what the neighbour would think if he looked outside to find a strange man standing in his yard. He could only think he’d have to explain how he was admiring his treasures, and ask his pardon to linger in his dark garden while. He didn’t think, if pressed, the neighbour could disagree with any of that.

He bent down and felt the grass with his fingertips. Looking up, the branches of the tree were gnarled and thin, lacking a lush head of leaves. The Messenger palmed the tree’s trunk and felt it drink the moisture from his fingertips. Tree. Are you a lost signal like me? Do you regret putting down roots here?

The tree didn’t have an answer, and the Messenger looked up at the neighbour’s window an instant before the light winked out, knowing somehow that it would.

This weeks Featured Author – L.S. Burton

1240301_452808221501768_1499511582_n

 

L.S. Burton lives in Corner Brook, Newfoundland, where he works as a writer and freelance editor. Though his stories are diverse, they all revel in the music and harmony of words, and celebrate imagination. In 2011, Burton was awarded the Percy Janes Award for Best Unpublished First Novel in the Newfoundland and Labrador Arts and Letters Competition for his novel Raw Flesh in the Rising. In 2013, he published the first installment of his genre-defying This Land series.

Clump, A Changeling’s Story

810etX1P24L._SL1500_

 

Clump, A Changeling’s Story [Kindle Edition]

Lynette Creswell , Luke Bailey

A race of monsters by day and ferocious timber wolves by night, the Windigos who live in the Red Canyon are formidable creatures. They survive by eating the flesh of the living but, oddly enough, there is one amongst them who cannot abide the taste of meat on his lips.

His name is Clump and he’s the chief’s only son. Each night and under the cover of darkness he sneaks away to feed upon a multitude of wild berries and fruits. No one knows his terrible secret but his father, Serpen, is growing suspicious.
Then one day, the Nonhawks, a vile species that likes to murder and maim, capture one of the tribe members, brutally disfiguring another. The victim is Brid, Clump’s sister, who is found abandoned in the plateau after suffering a beating which almost costs the young Windigo her life.

Serpen organises a group of hunters to help save Horith, the son of his trusted advisor, from the clutches of the Nonhawk tyrant, King Forusian. After the pack makes its way inside the castle, events spiral out of control which lead to Clump being accused of abandoning his father and leaving him to die.

Sentenced to death, Clump’s life changes forever when he is forced to flee his village. He soon embarks upon a magical journey where he will strike an unlikely deal with a witch, be saved by a Plainwalker and find a friend in an Elvin princess.
Be prepared! This is a touching story of unlikely friendships, unexpected love and the most deadliest of betrayals.

Now only .99 cents…

71ap7R5ug4L._SL1354_

The Tube Riders Trilogy Boxed Set [Kindle Edition]

Chris Ward

Included in The Tube Riders Trilogy Boxed Set –

The Tube Riders (The Tube Riders Trilogy #1)
The Tube Riders: Exile (The Tube Riders Trilogy #2)
The Tube Riders: Revenge (The Tube Riders Trilogy #3)

The Tube Riders short stories:

Tube Riders
Fallen from the Train
Going Underground
How Jessica Met Simon

plus an interview with the author

The Tube Riders

Beneath the dark streets of London they played a dangerous game with trains. Now it is their only chance for survival…

Britain in 2075 is a dangerous place. A man known only as the Governor rules the country with an iron hand, but within the towering perimeter walls of London Greater Urban Area anarchy spreads unchecked through the streets.

In the abandoned London Underground station of St. Cannerwells, a group of misfits calling themselves the Tube Riders seek to forget the chaos by playing a dangerous game with trains. Marta is their leader, a girl haunted by her brother’s disappearance. Of the others, Paul lives only to protect his little brother Owen, while Simon is trying to hold on to his relationship with Jess, daughter of a government official. Guarding them all is Switch, a man with a flickering eye and a faster knife, who cares only about preserving the legacy of the Tube Riders. Together, they are family.

Everything changes the day they are attacked by a rival gang. While escaping, they witness an event that could bring war down on Mega Britain. Suddenly they are fleeing for their lives, pursued not only by their rivals, but by the brutal Department of Civil Affairs, government killing machines known as Huntsmen, and finally by the inhuman Governor himself.

The Tube Riders: Exile

Having narrowly escaped the Governor’s savage Huntsmen, Marta Banks and the other surviving Tube Riders are on the run in northern France. Trapped inside a government-assigned quarantine zone, they search for a way out of a bleak countryside littered with abandoned worker robots and haunted by sinister monks, while at the same time a far deadlier threat than any they have faced before is searching for a way in…

The Tube Riders: Revenge

Live together, die together …

Three years after the end of The Tube Riders: Exile, the Governor is preparing for war with Europe. Within Mega Britain’s cities, pockets of rebels fight and die in the name of Marta Banks, brave leader of the surviving Tube Riders.

The Tube Riders themselves though, have disappeared. With their trail gone cold, the Governor and his deadly Huntsmen have no way to find them.

That is, until the day the Governor recovers a long lost treasure from his past, an ancient artifact that could crush the rebellion for good.

Marta Banks is about to lose everything.

Featured Book of the Week – Ghost story – Blackwood Legacy by Andy Downs

81bVCsTJMEL._SL1500_

 

Ghost story – Blackwood Legacy [Kindle Edition]

Andy Downs

Product Description

John Blackwood is someone you would do well to avoid. With a childhood filled with darkness and cruelty, his adult life has become focused on inflicting his immoral desires on others.

His latest victim, Elizabeth Holding, was chosen on nothing more than the seductive aroma of her perfume. But, as John finds out, his carefully laid plans can go awry in the most unpredictable ways.

Blackwood Legacy The paranormal thriller that refuses to let you go.

About the Author

Andy was born and grew up in Bedfordshire in the UK. He was a dreamy child who had as many imaginary adventures as he did real ones on the river and in the fields near his family home. Many summer days were spent building rafts (that usually sunk) and floating down the river with his friends. When it rained, he would spend hours daydreaming about hidden doorways to underground worlds where strange creatures lived. After twenty years as an engineer, he wanted to spend more time on enjoyable and creative pursuits, and now writes horror stories, teaches classical guitar, is a keen amateur ornithologist and enjoys woodwork. A note from the author. Like most authors, I like to hear what readers think of my books. My writing takes me to some impossible places which I enjoy sharing with you, the reader. There are fewer rewards greater than hearing that you have enjoyed them. So if you have an opinion and the time, I would appreciate your comments. You can leave them on Goodreads, Amazon, Facebook, Google+ or send me a message through the contact page of my website. I’d love to hear from you. Andy Downs