Archive for the ‘guest post’ Category

ProjectTerminusBookCoverProject Terminus by Nathan Combs

 

Books come and go. Some endure for generations. Fortunately for avid readers of thriller novels, there’s a new gun in town taking this genre by storm and his name is Nathan Combs. If you enjoy authors such as Brad Thor and Nelson DeMille and are a fan of nonstop action, then you’re going to love the first book in his apocalyptic series, Project Terminus.

Nathan Combs gives us a terrifying yet believable glimpse into the very near future. He accomplishes this feat with style, humor, and horror—often in the same sentence. With well-defined characters you will love and love to hate, Combs has managed to weave tenderness, love, violence, hopelessness, and terror into the same tale. Project Terminus is an exceptionally thrilling read you’ll not soon forget.

Be warned, this is not a bedtime story. Reading it as such will certainly be cause for a restless night. Project Terminus is impossible to put down. Even after the surprise ending—which would make Alfred Hitchcock envious—you’ll find yourself still holding on to the edge of your seat!

Project Terminus doesn’t disappoint.

ABOUT THE AUTHORNathanCombsHeadshot

If anyone knows survival, it’s Nathan Combs. The avid outdoorsman has spent over fifty years practicing survival techniques. A navy veteran and former deputy sheriff, Combs has firsthand experience and for six years owned and operated a successful survival website. He’s turned his knowledge into works of helpful nonfiction and terrifyingly entertaining fiction; all relating to real life situations requiring tactical survival knowledge.

BOOK DESCRIPTION

In the near future, financial collapse of the United States results in nationwide anarchy. Like dominos, the rest of the world follows the US into oblivion. Nuclear war followed by a viral pandemic decimates the globe, reducing the population to mere thousands.

In America, a group of survivors led by former SPECOPS Captain Wade Coltrane fight to survive and to regenerate society while protecting humanity from the greed of a faux king and a dysfunctional clan of sociopathic killers led by beautiful Russian psychopath, Nina Lutrova.

Will Project Terminus enable the development of a new nation or will greed and evil ultimately end civilization?

BOOKS BY COMBS

Project Terminus

ProjectTerminusBookCover

 

US: http://www.amazon.com/Project-Terminus-Nathan-Combs-ebook/dp/B016033ING/

UK: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Project-Terminus-Nathan-Combs-ebook/dp/B016033ING/

 

 

When The System Fails: Will You Survive?

WhentheSystemFails

 

US: http://www.amazon.com/When-The-System-Fails-Survive/dp/0996747702/

UK: http://www.amazon.co.uk/When-The-System-Fails-Survive-ebook/dp/B0158PYIMW

 

 

CONNECT WITH NATHAN COMBS

Website: http://nathancombsauthor.com/

GoodreadsGoodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4945838.Nathan_L_Combs

linkedinLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/pub/nathan-combs/16/555/B06

facebook-like-button1Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nathan.combs2

WANTED

Author: Krista Holly

Genre: Contemporary Romance

~ SYNOPSIS ~

With a Mother that shipped her off to boarding school as fast as she could, feeling unwanted is nothing new to Lo. When she got a chance to convince her parents to let he move back home, she went from feeling unwanted to being wanted by every guy in school.

Chase has always looked forward to summer and seeing Lo. He’s loved her devil-may-care attitude from the start. But when she moves back to town for good she’s changed and no longer the carefree girl she once was.

When jealousy gets the best of some people, you never know what’s going to happen, especially when they want something you have.

Would you let someone take away everything you’ve ever wanted?

~ PURCHASE ~

~ EXCERPT ~

 

I knew exactly how to throw her off her game. But I didn’t wanther to throw me out.
“Lo,” I barely whispered when I came up behind her at the sink.She was rinsing off our plates. I was an inch from being flush against herback. The urge to close the gap was strong. Like a moth to a flame, my body wasbeing pulled to her. My muscles ached, clenched, wanting her wrapped around me.
I reached around her and took the plate, placing it at thebottom of the sink. She turned the faucet off then braced herself, handsclenching the edge of the counter. I heard her breathing hitch, then shallow,quick breaths escaped her mouth. I could see her shoulders rise and fall. Ireached my other hand out and placed it next to hers. “Can I stay?” It was theonly thing I really wanted.
I didn’t care if we just stayed up and talked, or not eventalked. Music, movies, games—I didn’t care. I just wanted to be in herpresence. She blew out a hot breath.
“No,” she breathed out.
I knew if I pushed her too much she would throw my ass out in aheartbeat. But I wasn’t leaving without a fight.
“Please, Lo.” I leaned into her, still not touching her butmoving my mouth close enough to her ear that she could feel my breath and Icould see her hair move from the force of it. “I won’t try anything. I swear.”I’d promise not to touch her, if that’s really what she wanted. I’d promise heranything.
But when I looked down to her arm I could see the goose bumpscovering her bicep. I could practically feel the heat radiating off of her. Itwas euphoric and entrancing. This moment felt just right. It felt like I couldstay here forever. Hovering over the most infuriating and beautiful girl I’dever laid eyes on.
Her shoulders slumped when she let out a deep breath. “What areyou doing Chase?” Lo was trying not to give in but even I could tell that shereally wanted to. She felt it too. “Weren’t you just with Cam?” It was aquestion but came out as more of a statement.
I hated being reminded of that night. I was so damn frustratedwith Lo that I didn’t even think twice. I just buried myself in somethingmeaningless so I wouldn’t focus on Lo running off in the middle of the nightwith some fucking douche bag.
Cam was absolutely nothing to me. I’m a dick for saying it, butit’s true. Lo was becoming everything. I was obsessed. I needed to get underher skin like she did mine.
“That was nothing,” I whispered to her. I knew it wasn’t theanswer she would want or the answer she deserved. But it was honest and shedeserved that much from me. “I’ll do whatever it takes to prove that I’m notthat guy. I’m not Dieter and I’m certainly not Beckon.”
She finally released her hold on the edge of the counter andturned to face me. She kept her head low and avoided eye contact. Her chestrose and fell quickly. “I can’t do this with you. Just last week you werecalling me a whore, now your defending me and trying to prove your worthiness?What is it with you guys? You can’t get me one way so you’ll try to swoon meinto oblivion.” With her last word she finally locked eyes with me.
There was always a wall up in her eyes, but I could see it crackand start to crumble. Lo was putting up a worthy fight but I could feel herfaltering. If I just swooped in and sealed the deal with a kiss I know she’dfinally let go of the chain holding her back.
Leaning into her, tasting her breath, watching her eyes shiftfrom my mouth to my eyes, I was almost there. She put her hands on my chest. Ithought she was going to push me away. She started to but then she gripped thematerial like it was her lifeline.
Our lips touched, but before devouring her like I wanted to, Iasked, “Is this okay?” She took a deep breath, her ocean eyes shut for whatfelt like forever. I was struggling to hold myself back and when her eyesfinally opened I could see her letting the wall crumble.
She moved her lips tentatively and kissed me, slow. It was soslow it was painful. I felt the buzz spread through my body and head straightfor my dick. I wanted to speed things up, but she seemed more comfortabletaking it slow so I followed her lead.. I pushed myself into her, pinning heragainst the counter. I wrapped one hand around her waist and the other threadedthrough her hair and traveled down to her neck.
I didn’t want to be rough but I couldn’t help but jerk hertowards me. She started to open her mouth to me and I took the opportunity tosink my tongue into her mouth and take what she was giving. She tasted spicyand sweet at the same time. It was the perfect, heady combination.
I almost lost my control when she moaned into my mouth. Loreleased my shirt and wrapped her arms around my neck and threaded her fingersinto the hair at the nape of my neck. It tickled but it was the best fuckingturn on I’d ever had.
Her touches were hesitant, but when she finally made contact itwas greedy. I could stay here forever.
Consuming her.
Raptured by her.
I was lost in her touch and when she bit down on my bottom lipand tugged a little, every sensation I had shot straight to my groin. I wasrock hard and straining to contain myself. I moved my hand down to her ass andpushed her harder against me.
I wanted her to feel what she was doing to me. Her effect wasonly growing stronger with every second, minute, and hour I got to be with her.It was torture but the good kind. Feeling her like this.
I had no doubts about her. She was wild but tame. Almost likeshe was questioning if she was doing it right. I pulled her against me harder,pressing her into me, not giving her an inch away from my body. She pulled backand gasped for air. I took the moment to kiss her jaw and down her neck.Kissing and sucking as I went. She let out a taut moan and I could feel herpulse hammering in her neck. I kissed her there. Trying to calm her, but shit,even I wasn’t calm.
When I slid my hand down from her neck and to the front of hertank top I felt her jump a little. I rested my hand on her hip and started tocaress the little sliver of skin that showed. I continued to suck on her neck.
“Chase,” she said, and I couldn’t tell if it was a plea for moreor a sign that she was about to stop what I damn well didn’t want to stop.“Chase, stop,” she said so hoarse and raspy, I couldn’t actually believe shewanted me to.
But then she pushed on my chest and turned her head away fromme. Shock coursed through me.
“Lo, what’s wrong?” I asked panting. I knew she felt what I did.Why was she stopping me?

“I just can’t do this,

okay? You need to go to your party.”

 

~ TEASERS ~

** Teasers were provided by the author, but were created by @butthisbook from instagram ** 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

~ ABOUT THE AUTHOR ~

Krista Holly

Krista Holly is an avid reader and a Namast’ay in bed kind of girl. She started life in the City of Sin then traveled the country most of her life, going from coast to coast. A gypsy at heart with a passion for traveling and meeting new people. An ambivert, if you will. The only things she likes at Starbucks are Valencia Orange Refreshers and pumpkin bread and the occasional French Vanilla Cappuccino. She loves dogs and cuddling with her 85 pound white unicorn. When she’s not reading or writing or working she’s watching TV with her family or making fun of her brother’s love life.

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Welcome to Shaun Allan’s Darker Places tour.

 

Apparently, and I should actually have guessed, there’s a Wikipedia for Pooh called Winniepedia.  Something like that makes me smile.  It’s a cute play on words, for a start, and Winnie the Pooh can find a place in most people’s hearts.

“I want to be scary,” said Piglet in The Book of Boo.  Now, a walking, talking, clothes wearing pig would be scary in many cases – not least in Orwell’s Animal Farm – but, when said pig is scared of flowers and butterflies, you can’t help but feel for his plight.  He wants to be scary.  He wants to be fierce.

But, what is scary?  Moreover, what is horror?

I had a discussion this morning with a friend of mine.  Does ‘horror’ have to entail zombies and werewolves, or shouldn’t the genre be extended to things which are ‘horrific’?

Generally, of course, when someone says they don’t watch horror films, they refer to things like Nightmare on Elm Street, Cabin Fever, Sinister and the like.  They refer to films with ghoolies and ghosties and all manner of beasties.  They refer to death and gore and musical scores which send shivers down your spine before the first blade strikes or the first bite is bitten.

But, they’d happily watch a film such as Silence of the Lambs, for example.  Nowadays, the line between thriller and horror is blurring.  It’s harder to distinguish one form another and people’s definitions are varied.  We are becoming blasé and numbed to what, a few years  ago, would have had people fainting and vomiting in the cinema or looking under their beds after watching the TV or reading a book.

As horror becomes so much more mainstream and ideas more sparse, we find less things actually scary.  Personally, it’s been years since I was scared or even made nervous by a film or book.  You could argue that’s because I write horror and thriller.  Why would I be scared of little things like ghosts and slashers?  The last (and only, I think) time I felt the need to look behind a chair after watching a film was when I watched The Howling.  Today, the film seems hammy with a side plate of cheese, and with special effects which you find difficult to believe were believable – as much as werewolves are believable.

I was about 15 at the time, I think.  I was watching it in my parent’s living room after they’d gone to bed.  There was only a small lamp to light the room, to my right.  It was a long room with a small dining table at the far end.  The placement of the chair facing the TV meant you had your back to the dining section – and, at around midnight, in semi-darkness, I was ‘nervous’.

I looked behind the chair before I turned the TV off and felt so brave at turning off the lamp and walking to the hall in the dark to go to bed.  If a werewolf had jumped out at me, I’m sure my throat would have been devoured before I’d had chance to pour myself a glass of water to take up.  This doesn’t happen today.  I don’t get scared by horror films.  Many are regurgitated ideas of what’s gone on before and are fairly predictable.

So, what is the genre horror?  Do thrillers count?  I think, thinking about it as I am writing this, the answer is yes and no.  Thrillers do count as horror, but don’t necessarily come under the same genre.  That might not make sense, but it does in my head.  I wouldn’t count Seven as horror as far as the genre is concerned, but I do believe it has horror aspects.  A friend counted Silence of the Lambs on his top ten horror films, and I can see why, though trueblood horror aficionados might disagree.  There’s a lack of people being torn apart by jigsaws.  I don’t recall seeing a werewolf, zombie or ritualistic killer walking, hand in hand with the ghost of a lost child.

But, essentially, it’s still horrific.

I know people who hide behind cushions.  I know people who can’t watch anything which might even slightly be described as ‘horror’ as they’ll have nightmares.  It still works.  It still shocks – just not me.  Perhaps my own writing makes me less shockable.  Perhaps certain aspects of my life do that.  Maybe, but my wife doesn’t scare easily either.

Now, saying all of this, I do love a good horror film.  Mainstream zombies might be (thinking Plants vs Zombies and World War Z), but I thought 28 Days Later was excellent.  I think Twilight and Vampire Diaries et al made popcorn pap of vampires but would happily watch something more Sinister.  Speaking of ‘Sinister’, I enjoyed the film.  I liked Mama and Case 39 and The Others.  I love the original Fright Night for all its cheesiness (and probably because of it) but didn’t like the Colin Farrell remake.  They don’t frighten me and rarely make me jump (I watched The Woman In Black in a packed cinema with lots of squealing and jumping from everyone else…).  They do, however, excite me, have me on the edge of me seat and entice me into the shadows, somewhere I’m very comfortable.  I thought Cabin in the Woods was clever, though it took me a little while to decide if I liked it.  I was literally on the edge of my seat with the original Saw – it had originality and tension and plot, where I thought the sequels were gore porn and showcased multiple ways to kill someone.

Horror is meant to try and scare you (and for many it definitely does) and it’s also meant to twist your stomach and make chills run up your spine.  That much is obvious.  It’s also meant to take you into darker places or darker lives.  Or make you wonder if everything around you is actually as it seems.  Horror is meant to make you wonder if the light is all that bright and make you question what lurks behind your chair.  It doesn’t necessarily have to make you faint or throw up, just enjoy the ride when the lights go out.  It doesn’t need blood or throats ripped out.  The best horror has none of this.  It plays with your mind.

On a final note, I think my almost-four year old is starting early.  She’s now a fan (because of her older sister) of Michael Jackson’s Thriller and Ghost videos.  One night recently, when I put her to bed, she told me to sneak up on her mum and whisper ‘I like brains!’…  But she also watches In the Night garden.

Now that’s scary…

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Shaun Allan’s Singularity Books is proud to introduce Darker Places!


about DP

darkerplaces_96dpi_100What if you could steal the final moments from the dying? What if you had the darkest secret, but couldn’t think what it might be? What if you entered the forest in the deep of the night. Who is the melting man? And are your neighbours really whom they appear to be?So many questions. To find the answers, you must enter a darker place. Thirteen stories. Thirteen poems. Thirteen more doorways. 

Buy today!

 

An excerptA review of Darker Placesa guest postabout shaun

ShaunA writer of many prize winning short stories and poems, Shaun Allan has written for more years than he would perhaps care to remember. Having once run an online poetry and prose magazine, he has appeared on Sky television to debate, against a major literary agent, the pros and cons of internet publishing as opposed to the more traditional method. Many of his personal experiences and memories are woven into Sin’s point of view and sense of humour although he can’t, at this point, teleport.

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