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Apocalypstick on Amazon.com
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Apocalypstick contains two dark character-driven short stories that you will want to read again and again. A Madman with mental powers who just wants to be normal, even if the voice in his head makes him kill a few people along the way? Check. Non-stop creepiness that will make you check the back seat before opening the car door? Check. The fate of the world in the hands of a mutant teenager in love? Shape-shifting, plague-bearing, mind-controlling monsters wandering the streets of Manhattan? Check and Mate! What are you waiting for? Get this book! Still not sure? Alright, here are some sample pages of the two short stories in Apocalypstick: Finding Home Killing Tiffany Hudson |
Greg Carrico
invites you to dim the lights, draw the shades, and snuggle up
with a good book. Oh, and just ignore those noises outside. They're probably
nothing... |
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| Apocalypstick contains two deliciously dark short stories: Finding Home,
a creepy supernatural horror, and Killing Tiffany Hudson, a
post-apocalyptic tale of two genetically modified people who must decide
the fate of humanity. Finding Home If you have ever glanced at a stranger in the grocery store, and wondered what their life must be like, and then followed them home to peek at them through their plantation blinds, and then slipped through that unlocked sliding door at night just to look around; if you stood next to their bed to watch over them while they slept, and thought I could live this life, then please seek help. Weirdo. But on your way to the hospital (or the police station), walk a few steps in the shoes of a troubled man on a quest for a new home and a new life, while he deals with a few disturbing personal issues. Finding Home is a short paranormal horror story that lets you test-drive the lives of strangers in a perfectly legal, non-creepy way. Killing Tiffany Hudson Is there any line you wouldn't cross to save the life of a loved one? Is there any price you wouldn't pay? A young man battles with the consequences of his answers to these questions, in this post-apocalyptic short story, where right masquerades as wrong, weakness as strength, and deadly monsters as... camels? Well, sometimes, yes. |

