Showing posts with label apocalyptic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label apocalyptic. Show all posts

Monday, December 14, 2015

Last Light Falling: Into The Darkness



Another masterpiece! ~ Review by Crystal Simons

I read the first book of this series and loved it and was so excited to see this one. And man I was not disappointed. It picks up where the other one ended and the tragic story of Arena and her brother Gabe continues. It is so thrilling and deep, I could not stop reading it. The struggles, the hell they face daily is intense. And their strength grows as they do. Their journey to find their friends leads them to a place they did not expect and it changed everything once again. War, death, betrayal and the pure fight to survive grab you and hold you prisoner. I love the details as much as the first book and the strong characters made it another joy to read. It has a wonderful smooth flow and keeps your attention. I hated to see it end. J.E. Plemons is such a talented writer and I love how he thinks and how deep his imagination goes. I want more! I recommend this book highly to everyone and I look forward to more of this saga .You will love both books. They are both favorites of mine and ones that stay in your mind and heart long after the last page.


Book Description:

Arena has left the nation’s administration with a dead president and a weakened military, and while the tragic memories continue to scar her, the government struggles to regroup without its leader. For the people who still remain in hiding, it’s evident the country is all but lost, and with Russian operatives taking over, the nation’s hope of recovering is grim.

After months in hiding, Arena and her brother, Gabriel, fight to survive the aftermath while they trudge through unkindly terrain across the country to rejoin their friends, but what they soon discover may staunch their journey. The government’s failed attempt to rebirth a broken nation has caused civil unrest like no other.

After reuniting with their friends, Arena’s decision to stay changes when she discovers the secrets of a refugee camp behind a clandestine group of rebels, known as the Southern Resistance. With an opportunity to escape to a permanent safe haven, Arena risks her life to lead the new fellowship. But the darkest days are upon them, and with a new war brewing, Arena’s path will take a dark turn as her survival is in jeopardy.

Into The Darkness captures the cruel truth behind our darkest secrets which may often cause us to question our faith. In this graphic second installment of the LAST LIGHT FALLING series, J.E. Plemons continues the grim story of Arena Power’s fate, testing her faith while she and her brother search for an answer to their survival in a brooding world filled with chaos.

Meet The Author!


Jay has a BS in Music business with emphasis in publishing and copyright law, an English degree that he never intended getting, and a music education degree to which he will forever embrace.

Jay spent a year studying for the LSAT, then decided to attend culinary school,  hoping to become an aspiring chef in a five star restaurant, but didn't care for the fourteen hour days in a kitchen. So what did he do? Met his wife in college, got married, and after hearing the news of their first child, decided to skip the idea of attending law school. It was the best choice he ever made.

Jay spent his years in Nashville working in the music industry for companies like RCA, Sony, Zomba, and Dreamworks, all of which gave him a bitter taste in his mouth. Aside from working directly with many famous artists, his conclusion of the industry was a tainted cesspool of filth. From Austin, Texas to Nashville, Tennessee, Jay worked a small time in the film industry, as a PA, extra in a few films, and a various of other uninspiring, uneventful jobs. He dedicated his carpentry skills for a while creating custom fine furniture, manned a press for a print shop, was a studio musician, played drums for a few famous artists, taught high school band for a year, giving IT support for the Texas Legislature, and now an aspiring author. He has no claim to fame, nor does he want any.

Jay has been fortunate enough to experience many things in his life, some of which were humbling, others fulfilling, and because of that, he's grown to be patient and content. He's willing to struggle, fail, sacrifice, and fall before he learns to move on from those experiences. He's not afraid to die, but willing to live as long as he's able. Even though he'd like to see his kids grow old, Jay understands that every day  is precious, yet uncertain. He lives with the best intentions that everything is going to be okay until it isn't, and when that happens, He's free to just let go.


See previous posting about Last Light Falling: The Covenant, Book I

Monday, November 9, 2015

Last Light Falling Book II

last_light_falling_BOOK_2_front_cover

Last Light Falling: Into The Darkness: Book II

So good you will be enthralled throughout this novel! ~ Mary Nguyen

J.E Plemons is an outstanding author. Last Light Falling into the Darkness is brilliant, and easy to comprehend. Something that is a rarity to find these days. In the beginning, Arena and her twin brother Gabriel make their way across the broken nation. Adversities the twins must face are restless in this apocalyptic world. They make friends, and enemies. There is a few flashbacks of the horrors they preserved through in first book Last Light Falling: The Covenant. Arena and Gabriel struggle to survive within the torn nation. The overall theme “fighting to survive” is widespread in this breakthrough novel. It has everything you want in a Young Adult Dystopian novel. Last Light Falling into the Darkness, is thrilling enough to keep you captivated till the last page. Which leads to third book, yet to be released. You will be begging the author J.E Plemons to release it sooner!

Book Description:

Arena has left the nation’s administration with a dead president and a weakened military, and while the tragic memories continue to scar her, the government struggles to regroup without its leader. For the people who still remain in hiding, it’s evident the country is all but lost, and with Russian operatives taking over, the nation’s hope of recovering is grim.

After months in hiding, Arena and her brother, Gabriel, fight to survive the aftermath while they trudge through unkindly terrain across the country to rejoin their friends, but what they soon discover may staunch their journey. The government’s failed attempt to rebirth a broken nation has caused civil unrest like no other.

After reuniting with their friends, Arena’s decision to stay changes when she discovers the secrets of a refugee camp behind a clandestine group of rebels, known as the Southern Resistance. With an opportunity to escape to a permanent safe haven, Arena risks her life to lead the new fellowship. But the darkest days are upon them, and with a new war brewing, Arena’s path will take a dark turn as her survival is in jeopardy.

Into The Darkness captures the cruel truth behind our darkest secrets which may often cause us to question our faith. In this graphic second installment of the LAST LIGHT FALLING series, J.E. Plemons continues the grim story of Arena Power’s fate, testing her faith while she and her brother search for an answer to their survival in a brooding world filled with chaos.



...she discovers the secrets of a refugee camp behind a clandestine group of rebels, known as the Southern Resistance. 

J E Plemons
J. E Plemons  (Jay) Author Bio:

Jay have a BS in Music business with emphasis in publishing and copyright law, an English degree that he never intended getting, and a music education degree to which he will forever embrace.

Jay spent a year studying for the LSAT, then decided to attend culinary school,  hoping to become an aspiring chef in a five star restaurant, but didn't care for the fourteen hour days in a kitchen. So what did he do? Met his wife in college, got married, and after hearing the news of their first child, decided to skip the idea of attending law school. It was the best choice he ever made.

Jay spent his years in Nashville working in the music industry for companies like RCA, Sony, Zomba, and Dreamworks, all of which gave him a bitter taste in his mouth. Aside from working directly with many famous artists, his conclusion of the industry was a tainted cesspool of filth. From Austin, Texas to Nashville, Tennessee, Jay worked a small time in the film industry, as a PA, extra in a few films, and a various of other uninspiring, uneventful jobs. He dedicated his carpentry skills for a while creating custom fine furniture, manned a press for a print shop, was a studio musician, played drums for a few famous artists, taught high school band for a year, giving IT support for the Texas Legislature, and now an aspiring author. He has no claim to fame, nor does he want any.

Jay has been fortunate enough to experience many things in his life, some of which were humbling, others fulfilling, and because of that, he's grown to be patient and content. He's willing to struggle, fail, sacrifice, and fall before he learns to move on from those experiences. He's not afraid to die, but willing to live as long as he's able. Even though he'd like to see his kids grow old, Jay understands that every day  is precious, yet uncertain. He live with the best intentions that everything is going to be okay until it isn't, and when that happens, He's free to just let go.

See previous posting about Last Light Falling: The Covenant, Book I 

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

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This was a unique twist on dystopian writing. I had a love hate relationship with the heroine, who at various points trades off being a bad ass and wimp. She adds elements of Oliver Twist, X-men, and the medieval time period and it strangely works. This isn't a romance, but a fight for life and finding your place/your family. ~ Review by Krystal

Book Description - BOOK ONE IN THE E SERIES

Life is harsh. It makes no exceptions. Not even for the innocent.

Outpost Three: a huddle of crumbling buildings choked by a concrete wall. Cracked pavement, rusted metal, splintering boards. Huge robotic Sentries police the streets, but the Ten Laws are broken every time one turns its back.

Eden is determined, smart, and a born survivor. Stripped of her memories and dumped on the streets of the Outpost, slavers and starvation are only the beginning of her problems. A devastating conflict is coming that threatens to consume her world and tear her newfound family apart.

“Absolutely heart-stopping! Grizzly, dark, haunting and gripping in a way that kept me glued in to the very end. If you are looking for a strong and smart heroine in a kick butt dystopian world, this is the book for you.” - Leti Del Mar, author of Land of the Unaltered

“The characters are fascinating, especially the enigmatic love interest Jonas, and his threatening rival, the dark and sizzling Matt.” - Pol Blaze, author of Pan-Dim.

Excerpt:

Chapter 1: Iron Womb

I wake up in a box of iron.  I know nothing, remember nothing.  There is one thought imprinted on my consciousness:  You have been erased.

Disoriented, I’m swimming in warm darkness.  Tepid air.  Tepid metal.  The inability to move.  Limbs pressing outward, ineffective.  My ribcage curled in on itself.  No room to breathe.  The back of my skull smashed against the box.  Neck and spine aching.  Heavy limbs.  Not enough space.  Not enough air.  Suffocating.  Dying.

Panic.

There’s no way out.

I scream.  It’s a girl’s voice.  Am I a girl?

Flailing.  Pounding.  Hot blood under torn nails.  Dry, shredded throat.  I scream until everything stops.

An eternity later, I awaken in the warm darkness.

Again.

It's happened so many times, I’ve stopped counting.  I’ve stopped asking why.  Dry snot on my face.  Hollow insides.  Despair.  I decided long ago to give up and die.  But it continues.  Now I lie still in the dark.  Floating.  Drifting.  Time malfunctions.  My body winds down.  I’m fading.

Nothing.

Erased.

***

Cold air wisps across my cheek.  The touch of death?  I open my eyes and shut them as the light skewers my brain.  Tentatively, I crack my lids open again.  The image sharpens with each blink, a water-blurred lens coming into focus.  Brown dirt in a vertical plane bisecting my vision.  Eventually I realize I'm lying on my side.  My cheek presses into cold earth.  My right shoulder is crushed under my body, my limbs sprawled haphazardly.  Who knows how long I've been like this.  I lie blinking, unable to move, strangely fascinated with the colors and textures of the ground.  Small stones and twigs rise dramatically out of the landscape from this perspective.  Beyond them, only a few paces away, is a concrete wall.

I struggle to upright myself.  Three attempts later, I manage to sit up, which I immediately regret.  Starbursts chase black spots across my eyeballs.  My stomach turns over.  Heaviness sits on my chest.  Each breath takes the efforts of my entire body.  I'm certain I'll fall over, but it passes, resolving in a dizzy, drifting haze.  I blink and cast my eyes around, wondering where I am and how I got here.

Dirty walls of buildings, rusted corrugated steel panels and splintered, rotting boards make up most of my surroundings.  An alleyway leads away from this enclosed area.  Trash whirls across its opening and collects in a huddle against one wall.  More is piled against a building next to a dumpster.  A few feet away from me, the bleak grey sky is reflected in a puddle, oily patches on the water's surface obscuring the shapes of the clouds.  I scramble for the puddle on hands and knees, moving faster than I imagined I'm capable of.  Thrusting my hands into the dirty water, I scoop it up and drink.  Some of it runs down my chin and neck, soaking whatever garment I'm wearing.  It tastes foul, smells of something wrong, but I don't care.  It's liquid.  I drink handful after handful, then sit back on my knees, my shoulders slumping, hands dropping slack to my sides.  I pant, then take deeper breaths.  I sigh, a long, trembling sigh that releases all the tension from my body.  Tipping my face to the open sky— as dark and cold and uninviting as I can possibly imagine it— my heart embraces it as a thing of utmost beauty.  Open air, the ability to move— I am utterly thankful for these things.

There's a noise from down the alley.  Fear coalesces out of nowhere, seizing hold of me, compelling my body to move despite its weakness, its stiff joints.  I thrust my feet under me and will myself to standing.  Reeling against the dizziness, I throw my arms out and widen my stance to keep from falling.  I have to get out of here.  Now.

I'm only beginning to move when my mind starts translating what I hear.  Footsteps.  Male voices, low and laughing.  There is nowhere for me to go.  I force down a scream.  My eyes fall on the trash piled next to the dumpster.  I hike up the brown shift I'm wearing and wade into the heap of boxes and rags, sharp-edged tin can lids, moldy coffee grounds, greasy bones, and other rotten, rancid things.  Sinking down in the filth, I draw it over my head.  Something cold and slippery hits the skin of my neck, its stench filling my nostrils.  I make myself still, hold my breath.  And then the voices are right there, a few paces away from me.

Their cheerful conversation ceases.

"Nothing again today," one of them says.

There is the sound of a boot scuffing the pavement, then the faint splash of water as it hits the puddle. 

A second voice answers darkly, "Matt's gonna think we're slacking or something.  Take the loss out of our pay."

What loss?  In the silence that follows, I feel my face turning red, my lungs wanting to explode.  The sensation of suffocating seizes me again, the sharp memory of metal walls closing me in.  I need to breathe.  Need to scream.  I have to dig down into the fear and extract every drop of willpower to remain still and quiet.  The beginnings of a whimper stir in my belly, but I shut them down.  Only a moment more.  Only a moment.

"Nah," a third voice finally says.  "He knows we don't miss any.  If they haven't dropped here in two days, we'll surely get something tomorrow."

The others make noises of disgruntled agreement, and the footsteps move away, down the alley.

I try to last as long as I can after they're gone, but they've barely left when I lose the ability.  Gasping in air, I gag at the smell that assaults me.  I launch to my feet, trash falling from my hair and shoulders.  Scrambling from the pile, I press myself hard against the wall, farthest from the alley.  The ragged breaths I rake in are thick with a stench that clings to me.  My back is wet.  My skin crawls at its own filthiness.

Forcing my disgust away, I plunge into the puzzle amassing in my mind.  These men were looking for something that wasn't here, though they expected it to be.  Something that would be dropped here.  Something that would profit them, or the man they work for.  What could possibly be dropped in an alley?  What kind of coincidence is it that I am suddenly here?  Dropped here.  Me.  They're looking for me.  Slavers.

I repress another scream, clenching my fists, squeezing my eyes shut.  The darkness sends my mind involuntarily back to the box.  My body convulses.  As my eyes fly open, the words appear in my brain, burned there, like the ones before them:  You have been warned.  With them, a gate opens in my mind.  I can place myself in this world.  I know its laws.  I know its ways.  As for myself— everything that was me— it is gone.  Forever.  I have been erased.

I run my fingertips lightly over the center of my forehead, exploring the mark there, its edges swollen and raised, my skin tender and stinging with the newness of it.  My hand trembles.  I take it away from my face to look at it— long, slender fingers.  Pale skin.  Fingernails blackened with blood.  My palms are blue and bruised from pounding against the metal.  But it's a young hand.  That's one strike against me.  Please, please, don't let me be pretty.

I tear into the pile of trash until I find a piece of broken glass.  Wiping it with the hem of my shift, I notice my long, shapely legs.  Does my face even matter?  I tilt the glass in the grey light, repositioning until the surface collects my image.  I stare at it— a transparent rendering of myself.  Large, dark eyes.  Clear skin.  Full lips.  I hurl the glass away from me with a cry of frustration.  It splinters into a thousand shards against the concrete wall. 

I'm shaking from my core.  My body and mind want to collapse in on themselves.  That is the last thing I can allow.   

I find myself counting slowly backward from one hundred.  Ninety-nine.  Ninety-eight.  I must calm myself.  I must think.  Ninety-five.  Ninety-four.  If I do something stupid now, I'll regret it, probably for the rest of my life.  Ninety-one.  Ninety.  Eighty-nine.  I must form a plan.  Eighty-seven.  I need food, and shelter.  A place to hide until I can regain my strength.  Eighty-two.  Eighty-one.  Anyone who sees me could sell me out as likely as help me.  Slavers reward handsomely for pretty girls like me.  Seventy-two.  Seventy-one.  Seventy.  Sixty-nine.  I need to disguise myself.  Need to make myself unappealing.  More trouble than I'm worth.  Sixty-five.

I stop counting and consider the pile of trash.  Before I can balk at the idea, I begin pulling out any rags I can find.  There's a good mess of them, stained with things I'm sure I don't want to identify.  They are damp in places, stiff in others.  I find a large piece— it looks like a torn and stained bed sheet— and make a sort of robe out of it.  Smaller bits I wrap about my head, catching my hair up in them.  As I do, my fingers pause, briefly rubbing one silky lock.  It falls just below my shoulders.  I hold it in front of my face.  Dark brown, the color of coffee beans, or bitter chocolate.  I wrap it up tightly in the piss-scented rags, carefully covering the mark on my forehead, then smear my face and pale arms with dirt.  At the bottom of the pile I find something sticky and red.  I paint blotches on my exposed skin.  On my face.  On my long fingers. There are slight calluses along my fingertips, running all the way down my pointer finger, and across the top ridge of my palm.  I will never know how those calluses got there. 

Grief hits me for the first time.  But I cannot afford it now.  Later, it can come, when I'm away from here.  I'll allow it then.  The sorrow curls up inside me and settles down to sleep, waiting for its time.  I focus on this moment, this task, checking myself.  My brown shift is covered.  I cannot see my face, but my hands look positively frightening.  Small strips of rags are all that's left in the pile, so I tie them around my legs, stacking them to make fake pant legs.  I add dirt and gunk to my feet, then drape an extra piece of rag over my head like a hood to hide my face.  Cocked head.  Crooked posture.  Surely anyone who looks twice at me will find themselves moving in the opposite direction.  I practice a wet, throaty cough to go along with the blotches.  When I'm happy with it, I steel myself to move on.  I step toward the alley looking a hundred years old.  I feel a hundred years old.  Yet, I am born today from an iron womb.

E on Amazon!

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Those who tease his anger

 

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Guest Article by Jason McKinney

It’s their world now. By force of arms former US Army general Karl Vance, a werewolf with roots in the Black Death riddled days of the Dark Ages, has achieved the downfall of human civilization. Centuries of infiltrating the human race, and decades of building alliances within the worlds militaries, Vance has gained what he’s longed for; dominance over the world as homo-lycanus superior. But no absolute rule goes unchallenged.

Within his pack, lycanthropic lieutenants challenge him for their own territories, gambling that his resources and abilities are spread thin in his war against mankind. Those who tease his anger will learn quickly that what Vance has done to humans he will just as easily do to his own kind. Vance’s reach is exceeded only by his hatred of opposition. Humankind and their lycan allies continue to stand against Vance even though cities across the planet have been reduced to rubble thanks to Vance’s weapons and lycans of mass destruction.

Marine Corps Major Omi Kunpai and US Army Captain Paul Demarti are two survivors of the initial lycan attacks in Tikrit, Iraq. With them is Chief Warrant Officer Brenda Walinski, an Apache helicopter pilot who suffered head wounds leaving her with dissociative identity disorder that allows her to sense lycans, and Private First Class Gloria Zeller, a soldier that deserted after the attack on Forward Operating Base Ironjaw to wage a guerilla war against lycans.

They and other Iraq campaign survivors form the core of a group lead by US Army General Timothy Hughes, a one-time ally of Karl Vance. Hughes is like Vance; one of the world’s first lycans, but sympathetic to humans. Vance and Hughes split centuries earlier after Vance challenged Hughes to the role of alpha, and lost.

For Kunpai, Demarti, and the others there is no altruistic hope for reclaiming humanity’s greatness. It’s a dog’s world now, and it’s gone straight to hell. They just want to get a little payback.

Dog World: Gone to Hell is the second book in the Dog World Series.

 

Get your copy on Amazon!

UK  USA CDN AU

Dog World is Book One!

Dog_World_Book_1_cover

Review by Cabin Goddess ~ Dog World - A Post-Apocalyptic Nightmare

When I first read the premise of this book my first thought was how can anyone find a way to tell us an original tale in a genre that is so inundated with books and movies every year? Well first time author, Jason McKinney has managed to do this and more. 'Dog World' starts off with a bang and never stops, not even at the end. Throw in a bit of karaoke and one mad 'man's' vision of a human in the freezer for all, and you will eat this book up!