A sprawling fantastic tale of the ’60s, supposedly written by “legendary” B-movie director Larry Winchester. . . .
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Regan St. James is just your typical eighteen-year-old vampire hunter. He enjoys sharp objects and random hook-ups. But one night, in a quiet little mountain college town, he meets a guy named Ira who just might change his life. If he can survive Ira’s relatives, of course. . . .
The stories of the greatest spy the Western World has never known. The man who killed Hitler, saved three Presidents, saved the world a hundred billion times, and wishes he’d never been apotheosized. Immortality is !@#$’n overrated, and he’s living proof. Nick Fury as written by Warren Ellis’ slightly-less-humanistic literary doppelganger, with lots of help (read: drugs) . . .
Jason Blue has been ten years old for just a few days when a dragon hungry for his flesh abducts him from American suburbia. Then things only get weirder. Permanently estranged from Earth, Jason travels through the slightly futuristic free city of Gyeeds, the supernaturally calm waters of the Starving Sea, and the ambiguously prosperous dictatorship of Droydania. He faces . . .
Simon Fell has awakened at a foreign star with no memory of his former life. He stands to inherit the legacy of a self he has never known. In a complex and frightening world of pioneer planets, clashing cultures and esoteric robots, one lost man will face a battery of tribulations, from his ignorance of basic customs to his entanglement . . .
Gare Marx has been a PI for all of five minutes when he discovers he sucks at it. The mob wants money he never borrowed, he’s suspected of murdering someone he hasn’t met, and he’s hired to find a woman who may be involved in some extremely shady business. That, and his secretary is an amoral jiu jitsu-loving sociopath. . . .
The odd tales of a pair of glasses on a zombie. It’s as simple as that . . . Or perhaps not. In a fairly standard post-apocalyptic world, we follow the tales of, well a pair of glasses, while we as the readers discover it ourselves. What happens next, no one knows . . . Not even the author. . . .
A serial about a busser, Nicholas Jeff, dealing with the stupidity and foolishness of Shelly Sholes Restaurant. . . .
This is a story of the Quest of Sir Cadagon. Based on the painting from Harry Potter (Sir Cadogan), it is the struggle of a knight and his fat pony traveling through world famous paintings. They search for their Painter, in order to find their purpose in life. The plot develops, it is voted by the readers. . . .
The house was full of packing-cases. Even the pretty lawn at the side was to pack up, stiffly and slowly, through the bare echoing November. The very robin that her father had so often made, with his own hands, more gorgeous than ever; amber and golden; here, at this bed of thyme, began to speak of carrots. The grand inarticulate . . .
The comings and goings in a rapidly gentrifying tenement building in lower Manhattan. . . .
A humorous chronicle of supernatural occurrences in a small Wisconsin town. Featuring Lovecraftian references, classic monsters, and magic. . . .
Of all the times for the dead to rise from their graves to feast on the living why did it have to happen right before the premere of George Lucas’ new Star Wars movie? . . .
“Fisson Chips” is quirky, madcap romp about a new PI having a very bad first day. Gare Marx started a private investigating business with his partner Matthew Richardson. When Gare shows up for work, the guy painting the sign on the door refuses to finish until he gets more money. This starts a chain of events that ends with broken [more . . .]
If you’ve ever wanted to read a hard-boiled choose your own butt-kicking novel then Fission Chips is definitely for you. In point of fact if you’re a fan of the hard boiled genre of fiction at all then you’ll probably enjoy this one. It’s got everything, from the down-and-out private eye to the sassy secretary and the insurmountable mountain of [more . . .]