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. . . .
more:
editor picks
· member picks
· popular
· worthwhile
· recently vetted
· all recent additions
or jump to a random listing
Marty hated his life, especially since breaking up with the girl he loved with his whole heart, Selena. That was before the Zombie Apocalypse hit. Now life sucks even more because not only does he have a broken heart, but the undead have nearly overrun the city. Selena died, lost to the zombies. His only means of communication with . . .
Action, adventure, paranormal romance. Marradith Ryder has always had powers she can’t explain. She’s taken from her home by a man named Justin, who claims that he was sent to protect her. Can she trust him? And why is she so important to the powerful members of The Circle? . . .
Original works of fantasy, horror, and science fiction. Ten years of novels, short stories, and serial fiction. All free. . . .
Told in the style of classic pulp fiction and film noir, each week you can catch up on the latest in the adventures of none other than Samuel Swift, a private eye with a penchant for cases that are dark, dreary, and fraught with more than a touch of the supernatural. . . .
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 . . .
Sun-kissed is a story about vampires, those hunted by vampires and those who hunt vampires. . . .
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. . . .
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. . . .
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 . . .
Asa fights Sun Walkers; creatues that threaten the living. Scarred by the death of her friend, Asa dedicates her life to fighting a threat that others don’t know exists. . . .
All over the world, Knights are appearing. They have swords. They ride horses. They wear shining armour. They’re causing trouble. Nobody knows where they came from or why they’re here—even the Knights themselves are pretty vague on the matter. However, they’re not about to let that get in the way of their crusading. They have a Law to uphold. . . .
Special deputy Jameson Arkeley stopped a vampire rampage 20 years earlier, during which he whittled down all known bloodsuckers to a single survivor, Justinia Malvern. Kept alive at a sanitarium in rural Pennsylvania by minimal life support and bizarre laws preventing her extermination, wispy Justinia seems a threat to no one—until a series of vampire killings in the area suggest . . .
There are two things you need to know before I begin this review proper. First of all, it’s not normal for editors in WFG to review a work that’s just started. Knightfall’s only at Issue One, though that issue is fairly substantive. But I stumbled onto it by chance on the editor’s unreviewed listings board, and I found myself scrolling, [more . . .]
Summary: The Rapture is coming.
Likes: Despite it’s size, it is a relatively easy read. I’m not too big on scripts, but this one reads somewhat like a novel. It’s more of a script-novel hybrid with the descriptions and details like a novel, but the dialogue of a script. Then there [more . . .]