What’s it like to be a zombie? When a small town bank is surrounded and attacked by the zombie horde, not everyone makes it out alive. The story of the survivors, human and zombie alike, unfolds one chapter at a time. . . .
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Part II of The American Book of the Dead – a novel about evolution and the apocalypse, which won Best Fiction at the DIY Book Festival and the Gold IPPY Award for Visionary Fiction. In Part II, the writer of the first novel is commissioned to write another book that may help avert catastrophe, and pave the way for . . .
This is the story of a man on a business trip to Germany when Katla volcano erupts and leaves him stranded. It’s his journal entries as he tries to get out of Europe and home to the USA, and how he sees Europe start to fall apart as the ash falls. As Europe falls into chaos, the world follows. . . .
It’s about Zombies. Groaning, moaning, maddened flesh eating abominations driven by their insensate desire to feed. Zombies, a metaphor for a struggle we face every day. A metaphor for our hopeless battle against the savage throng of the human tide . . . an ocean of grasping hands, tearing, ripping, desecrating what you have, who you are. We struggle to keep our heads . . .
From the author of the award winning novel “River” and internet cult hit “Catharsis” comes a serialized novel about the end of the world and the lives of those destined to stop it. Three girls are thrust together by their shared abilities and the roles they are to play in the nearing apocalypse. They are guided only by the mysterious . . .
What’s it like to be a zombie? When a small town bank is surrounded and attacked by the zombie horde, not everyone makes it out alive. The story of the survivors, human and zombie alike, unfolds one chapter at a time. . . .
Death doesn’t have to feel like the end of the world. Zombie’s lives as they’ve known them are over, yet somehow they’re still standing. In the wake of all-consuming tragedy, they stagger forward, hands reaching out for the same people who once gave their lives hope and meaning. They need them. They’re hungry. Unable to use their own brains, . . .
David Sturmbridge finds his world literally turned upside down. The dead of his past suddenly alive again, a world of post apocalyptic terror replacing his own humdrum existence. His own face now mocks from the mirror, as he tries to discover what has happened to his world. . . .
Delta Flight is an apocalyptic web serial novel written by Michael Hughes about a Special Forces unit that must save humanity by preventing a 2,000 year old Roman curse from awakening the Anti-Christ. . . .
Wayne Robertson is an astrophysicist at a radio telescope array in Antarctica who intercepts a series of transmissions from over half a billion light years away, and 176 years into the future. It is through these transmissions that he discovers the existence of Maxim Akihiko Broussad, a deranged genetic hybrid named Spegg, and a wealth of new technology that will . . .
Tracing the intersecting stories of a reluctant rebel, a refugee with a storied past and a would-be conqueror striving to make his mark in a family of great men. They find love, death and struggle in the ruins of the once great city of Trana two centuries after the Great Collapse brought the world low. . . .
It’s 1864 and the American Civil War has come to boil. A captured voodoo priest is forced by a Union general to use his powers to swing the battle in his favor, a mistake that the young country would grow to regret. A mist from the other world is spreading quickly, dragging fallen soldiers back into battle against their . . .
The Lifting of the Veil feels very slow because the the characters are "explained" with references to their past and internal thoughts that don’t really create conflict or drive the plot forward. In other words, the beginning just doesn’t provide a lot of impetus to continue reading. This is especially problematic because LotV has a lot of characters, all of [more . . .]
I discovered this online serial by pure chance back in in December and forgot about everything else while I read all the material online at that time.
It’s an amazing story, where characters have depth and emotions. You can tell these could be real people, and not a black and white [more . . .]