Wednesday, February 19, 2020

Pump Up Your Book Blog Tour - Weeks by Jasyn Turley





WEEKS

By Jasyn T. Turley

Scifi / Post Apocalyptic Zombie



Phil, Tim, and Dakota are three survivors taking refuge in Atlanta,
Georgia. The year is 2027, ten years after a nuclear fallout decimated
the known world and left it in shambles. With hordes of the undead
flooding their once safe home and a city now depleted of all resources
and supplies the three must make a daring gamble. To trek across the
States and Canada, looking for a new place to call home; safe from the
monsters that plague the lands.




In their daring gamble this trio encounters more than just zombies.
They are relentlessly pursued and hunted by both an old and new
nemesis’. Trying to survive and stick together, no matter the odds, they
must rely on their faith, bond, and past experiences to live through
their tribulations. In this world, a fool’s chance is usually their only
chance.





Amazon → https://amzn.to/2Fw5Jc7





Except from Chapter Three – Present Day

2027



He stood there, in the middle of the four-way stop, staring down at the dusky horizon, the growing shadows of the building. There was a reason they had come here, but the beauty of the twilight mesmerized him to the point of forgetting. The fact that nature could still hold its beauty, its color, despite all that has happened, only strengthened his faith in God.

    For ten years they had lived off of faith. Living on what they worked so hard to obtain. All the clues, riddles and puzzles they solved to find and unlock caches filled with supplies; their lifeline. For ten years of survival and struggle they found joy with pain, blood with sweet, rejoicing with suffering, repentance with sinning. It was their faith in Christ that held them together, in the darkest moments when the night closed in all around them and the sky seemed as if it was falling on them.

    There was no sense of weekdays, calendars. All they knew was based off of measuring the months themselves for the last ten years, since 2017. They knew it was at least ten years that they’ve been together.

Thinking back to his memories always put Phil in a trance, and the twilight hours of day only deepened it. He could best be described as “the lights are on but nobody’s home.”

    “Phil. Hey, Pastor Phil!” Tim yelled out louder than he was comfortable with, but he could see Phil was now alert.

    “What?” Phil asked, breaking away from the trance of the twilight.

    “The Humvees? Remember?” Dakota asked from nearby. Her voice sounded concerned as she pointed to the ancient bodies of metal vehicles.

    They were only scrap now, after ten years of rot and decay has set in. All three Humvees sat at the four-way stop, filled with potholes; probably from mortar fire. This was obviously a case of friendly fire as the vehicles too looked like they were hit by mortars. Rubble had piled up on the sides of each vehicle and the area as a whole looked like it had suffered a good deal of mortar fire.

    The three Humvees used to be used by the Army. One had a hatch on its roof, where a mount for a machine gun, now long missing, had been positioned. He had the idea to start searching the city more painstakingly, seeing that the last of their supplies was stretching thin. There were no more caches available and their resources were depleting. So Phil wanted to double check everything… again. He hoped these Humvees would make their day a little more fruitful because so far the only things they had managed to find was two MREs and a bottle of whiskey.

    “Right,” Phil said, looking away from the twilight horizon again, to focus on the task at hand. “Tim, take the center, Dakota the first. I’ll check the rear one,” he ordered, walking away towards to the Humvee ruins in the back.

    Tim and Dakota both shrugged their shoulders casually, but they were both thinking the same thing. Before Dakota parted from Tim, he stepped closer and whispered in a low voice.

    “Do you still think he’s just going through a phase?” he asked.

    “We all do every once in a while.” Dakota answered.

    “In basic, you go through a thirteen-week adjustment period. Guess what, he’s been like this for months now.”

    “Tim, it took me two years to adjust to America when I moved here, and three years to learn English. It has to be a phase.”

    “Ten years after everything went into the gutter, and now he’s going through a phase? I don’t buy it, sis. Otherwise he would’ve been like this from the start,” Tim said, patting her back and turning his attention to the ruins of the vehicle in the center.

    Dakota had the leading Humvee. It felt normal because she always was the one taking point—well, usually she was. Whether it was scouting, reconnaissance or overwatch, her eyes were mostly up front looking ahead. Even when she was in the 75th, she went on frequent scouting missions. Before that she was a field surgeon who knew her way around a needle and the basics of an operation table.

She was no psychologist but she knew something was wrong with someone who was constantly getting stuck in his head. Blaming it on current circumstances was futile: they were all, to a degree, sociopaths. She had shot and killed people within arms reach and still could sleep the same night. Granted, it took some time getting to that point. No, Tim was right. Something else was eating at Phil from the inside.

They would have to worry about that later, right now they only had a little bit of time left to forage what they could from these Humvees and head back to base before other things became more active at night. Though she and Tim both remember that they had already picked these Humvees clean long ago. The whole city was pretty much picked clean. For Phil to forget something as little as that, there had to be something more going on with him; and they couldn’t waste anymore days’ worth of work to let him sort things out in his head.

Phil watched as Tim took to the middle Humvee and started to pull on the driver door. Its long rusted hinges gave way as Tim pulled the door clean off. Of the three, Tim was the strongest. He could overpower Phil in any wrestling match they had. His dark skin was sweating, even though it wasn’t hot or humid outside.

He never knew why but, for some reason, when he was a child Phil was intimidated by black people. It was strange, because just about every black person he met as a child was a nice person, very charismatic.

All that intimidation would change the day he joined the Army, after graduating high school. Just about all the men with him in boot camp were African American. Even later on during active service, most of his fellow comrades alongside him were black, and were the closest friends he ever had. Maybe the intimidation was, in part, due to his sheltered upbringing. That was why he joined the Army in the first place, to toughen himself and discard that timidity he felt; for he was timid of many more things. It was ironic: since the bombs blew and the radiation created abomination from that of God’s creation, he found even more things to be timid of. There was that fear of combat that never did change, his mind just became calloused to it; and now there were unmeasurably more things to fear than other people. But he thanked God every day that he was no longer intimidated by people who weren’t the same color as he, for Tim always gave Phil a sense of security when present.

He liked Marines too, back in his day, they were always fun to mess around with because they could take what you threw at them and dish it back. Mostly. Tim even dressed the role on a regular basis, though more of a casual sense. There was no reason to dress in anything that wasn’t combat friendly. He usually wore the olive drab, or OD, green shirt with matching battle dress uniform, or BDU, digital camo pants and combat boots. But every once in a while, he would adorn civilian attire and a black leather jacket. Some things you just don’t quit doing after everything’s fallen apart.

Then Phil took a look at Dakota. She spoke excellent English for a Brazilian; save for some discrepancies that were so minor, he hardly ever noticed. Nevertheless you knew what she was saying.

Phil could relate to Dakota a lot more then he could with Tim at times. She was dominantly introverted. You’d really have to force her out of her shell to see any extroverted behavior. Fortunately, after knowing each other for ten years, they were all comfortable with one another, so she had long since come out of her shell. He himself was introverted, but at times extroverted.

Tim was extroverted, enough said.

Dakota had an inner beauty of her that reminded Phil a lot of his mother. For Phil and Tim, she was their rock, who could bear all sorts of weight on her shoulders. She too joined the Army, but later on she became a Ranger; Phil went a different path in his career. Phil often wished that the three of their paths had crossed before the fallout occurred, had he retired later.

Phil had mad respect for the Rangers. Hell, he went through Ranger school himself for the honor of the Ranger tab on his uniform. Ever since, he had the utmost regard for Rangers. But he loved harassing them at the same time, he and his buddies he served with. But it was more like picking on your little brother. Just like with the Marines, he could joke with any Ranger and expect them to return the favor, oftentimes tenfold.

Dakota chose a more practical way into the lead Humvee. The doors would not open for her and she knew she couldn’t rip it off like her dingle-dork buddy did. So instead she climbed on top of the vehicles and worked her way in through the hatch. But upon inspection, she came up with the same result as did Tim. There was nothing here. She looked out the busted back window and saw Tim rub his head as he finished his search.

Like Tim, she wore the same type of pants, except hers was a solid green pair of BDU pants, with combat boots. She sported a dark blue tank top with a dark green overshirt. She kept her hair in a ponytail with her bangs framing the side of her face. Neither Phil nor Tim could ever understand how she could stand to have hair as long as hers; though it wasn’t long at all, just more hair than they had.

It was a bust, the whole day. Two MREs and a bottle of liquor, even though the liquor could be used for quite a few different purposes. It could also help them to stomach these age-old MRE’s too.

Phil felt his foot move something, and a metallic clank followed. Looking down he saw a rectangular piece of metal, bent and twisted. The paint that once was green was now faded save for the last three letters spelling “ave”. He recognized this old road sign; it was still scorched and ruined as when he last saw it.

“Shit,” Phil said rubbing his head as he gently laid the metal back down. He remembered now: they had already searched this site, along with the entire portion of this part of Atlanta, at least four times. This place was long since bone dry of anything to scavenge.

Standing back up he looked towards Tim and Dakota and whistled, loud enough to be heard but not loud enough to echo down the street. He wouldn’t bother looking into the rear Humvee, there was nothing there.

With a wave of his hand he motioned the other two towards their mode of transportation—ironically, a Humvee. There were plenty of vehicles left once the military abandoned the city, the whole state of Georgia for that matter. Dakota had claims on their Humvee, as she was quite fond of it. But that didn’t stop Phil from climbing into the driver seat, knowing she wouldn’t mind; he needed the distraction of driving. He took a glance at himself: his old brown hiking boots, his blue jeans, black shirt and brown, leather bombers jacket were all dusty. It was time to clean them again—which meant dusting them off as best he could.

Tim climbed into the passenger seat and Dakota into the back with her eyes watching the rear.

Hmph, eyes on back. Nice little mix-up on things, she thought to herself.

    “We’ve already been here before,” Phil mumbled, more to himself than to them. He was disappointed in himself.

    “Don’t worry about it buddy, we’ll get it tomorrow.” Tim’s voice was solid and reassuring, but not entirely convincing. How do you make up for a days’ worth of scavenging?

    “Maybe it’s time we started looking outside highway two-eighty-five?” Dakota suggested, but got no response.

    The engine shook and rumbled to life at the turn of the ignition switch before Dakota could finish what she was saying. They all knew what lay beyond the highway encircling Atlanta, and he wanted to avoid another debate—at least for now. Phil took a wide ‘U’ turn and then they were on their way back home.











Jasyn T. Turley was born in Wyandotte County, Kansas City, Kansas;
and lives in Independence, Missouri. He is an independent author and
full-time custodian. He holds an Associates in Arts degree from MCC KC
Community College. He started WEEKS Book One back in the summer of 2009
and has been continuously working on it, and its sequels, since then. He
has more science fiction and fantasy books in the works that he plans
on releasing in the future. You can learn more about Jasyn, WEEKS Book
One, and future projects at https://turleybookinn.com/.


WEBSITE & SOCIAL LINKS:

Website: http://turleybookinn.com


Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/JayFiction


Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/19608376.Jasyn_T_Turley

A Word From The Author

History of My Tentative Writing Process

           Many things change in life and the process in which I write is one of them. Despite being a first time published author, I’ve been writing since 2009. Ever since I first sat down and started mapping out the story of WEEKS Book One, things changed and now my process is nothing like how it was at the start. Eventually, I had learned to compartmentalize and break down the process into organized phases. In all honesty, it took me up until recent years to realize that I can’t just keep writing like how I first start. So my process changed, and so did I, as breaking down the steps and phases of my projects made them more manageable. However, there were still complications to be met and in recent weeks however, no pun intended, I’ve again altered my process inspired by none other than Stephen King; more on that later.

           So starting out, I had all these ideas and I didn’t stop to think. I just wrote, and the story spilled itself out on paper. The Muse had beckoned and I was like a little kid at the playground. I didn’t want to stop and that was the problem. I didn’t stop to reflect and analyze what I was doing. At that point I had rough, and I mean very rough, drafts of WEEKS Books One-Three already mapped and written out; this was somewhere around 2010. Then I embarked on a side project, a future duology I plan on releasing in the future, and again the words just poured themselves out. This was when I was just chasing after that creative flow state, that high, where words pour themselves on paper and the passion and love and all mysterious vigor of writing takes over. I ran myself out of gas and didn’t know how all I knew was that writing was inside of me. It was my calling from God, and I felt hollow without it, and 2013 was where I hit a major curb stomper and my creative meter went empty. Though I still attempted to make new stories, some I’m still committed to seeing through, I did pretty much the only thing I could do with my circumstance. I continued to self & peer-edit WEEKS time and time again.

           Perhaps empty is a strong word in this context, but you get the picture. I tried and tried, upon countless other projects. All ending in nothing more than unfinished stories I ended up scraping, and outlines for future projects I still aim to pursue. I was going through college at the time and everything was mundane. Then something happened, a flair for writing sparked and it was as if that meter went back up. A fantasy story kicked in and I had been given enough gas to get me to a place where I could stop and refuel figuratively speaking. So I did research, on other writers and understanding that there existed a process for writing and that the process differed from author to author. It wasn’t until sometime in 2018 when I really began to compartmentalize the process and instead of forcing creativity, I started to learn how to nurture it. Eventually, I came up to this process which I understood was tentative but at least helped me keep my focus:
RDP1: Just Write
RDP2: Expand/Elaborate Plot Points
RDP3: Add Detail
RDP4: Consistency/Practicality
RDP5: Dialogue edits
RDP6: Polish
           Where RDP simply means Rough Draft Phase #. And that was as simple as I could make it, though I could describe each phase and what they mean for me I can save that for another time. This simple process helps keep me focused and in check without overloading myself with the full weight of a book at once. Instead, I now know how to break it down in its early stages of conception. Though keep in mind, the above is not the only steps I take in making a book; their simply a guide to help me focus on getting my rough draft made.

           Now I come to the most recent change in my writing process. I’ve watched this video on YouTube with Goerge R.R. Martine and Stephen King and they were sitting down talking about writing in front of an audience. Well Stephen King said something that hit me, he said “The way I work, I try to get six pages a day… and every day I work, three four hours, I try to get those six pages neatly polished.” (Note: I paraphrased here). And I have to thank the king of horror for his words. Because when I look at each phase for self-critiquing my rough drafts, all I could see was this daunting task of going over my rough drafts 6+ times. It was a little intimidating, though don’t get me wrong I still love it all the same. But I was inspired by Mr. King’s words, and so now instead of focusing on each phase separately, I instead go over my rough draft by chapter and hit all six phases per chapter at once. I gotta say, it is so less intimidating and daunting; and I have to admit that I feel more excited to self-edit my draft after this last change.

           At first, I started out as ignorant as can be and that’s not necessarily a bad thing. Writing for the sheer joy of writing is something we should all try and preserve and now let it go. I realize that I’m an aspiring author, with his first book about to be published. But with all the drafts and writing I’ve done over the last eleven years, I hope you find something in my testimony worthy to remember. Whether it’s compartmentalizing your process, listening to the experts of our craft, finding your own path or what have you. But keep in mind, as I now do, that the process may not be set in stone. My process is very much tentative and will continue to get better as I get better as an Author.


 


http://www.pumpupyourbook.com



Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Unicorn Book Feature - Unicorn Genesis By S. Platt and JB Truant


Sybrina's Unicorn Book Pick

Unicorns!  How we love them. . .Luckily for all of us unicorn lovers there are hundreds of unicorn books available for all age groups.  I have gathered information about as many as I can find and have placed them here for you on my blog.

You can also find many more for all ages at Sybrina's Blue Unicorn Book Store.

 Today's Unicorn Book Feature is



Unicorn Genesis

 By Sean Platt & Johnny B. Truant

Unicorn Genesis starts in the Farback, as Edward’s Grappies spin yarn of life as the first unicorns, Adam and Eve, of the time before the Great Flood that tore the worlds apart, before The Realm, before the Sands, and before Marshall Clint Gulliver.

Join Edward and Clint as the world’s favorite (and surliest) unicorn tells the gunslinger about his days as a unicorn colt, and how all life (in all worlds) began, as he comes of age in worlds both real and make-believe. Unicorn Genesis is another epic tale in the Unicorn Western series exploring oral tradition, the stories we love, and what we all believe to be true.

From the creators of Yesterday's Gone (Platt) and Fat Vampire (Truant) comes this reinvention of both the western genre and unicorn lore. Written for children and teens -- but complex and awesome enough for adult readers -- Unicorn Western is "Harry Potter without wizards, with gunslingers, with talking unicorns and epic unicorn fights, and with more turkey pie."

Get It At Amazon.





Find hundreds of unicorn books for all ages at Sybrina's Blue Unicorn Book Store.




If you like this post and others on this blog, scroll all the way down to the bottom left of this page anc click the FOLLOW button to receive more from Sybrina's Book Blog.

Monday, February 17, 2020

Sybrina's Blue Unicorn Book Store - Unicorn Steampunk Statue



Sybrina's Blue Unicorn Book & Gift Store

Unicorn Steampunk Statue



From Sybrina's Blue Unicorn Book Store

http://www.sybrinablueunicornbook.com/index_Books_Featuring_Unicorns_For_Teens_YA_and_Older_Readers.htm

Where you'll find unicorns, more unicorns and nothing but unicorns! Visit now.

  Brought to you by Journey To Osm



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Sunday, February 16, 2020

Pump Up Your Book Blog Tour - The Knowing By Brit Lunden





We're thrilled to kick off the virtual book tour for THE KNOWING by Brit Lunden. If you would like to follow her tour, visit Pump Up Your Book!


THE KNOWING: A BULWARK ANTHOLOGY (Book One)

By Brit Lunden

Fantasy Anthology

Bulwark- a wall or stockade that protects or sometimes hides the truth from the outside world. Bulwark, Georgia, isolated, hidden. Who knows what strange things can happen when the rest of the world can't see you? JB Stratton is alone in the world, and all he has left are the memories of his beloved Ellie. Dirt poor JB and wealthy Ellie feel an instant connection that is as intense and primal as the blood red earth of their home. Unseen roots connect them, pulling them into an impossible relationship. Will the memories of past lives help or hinder the path of their love? Based on the original novella Bulwark, by Brit Lunden, The Knowing continues the story of a town isolated from the rest of the world where the impossible becomes plausible, and logic is determined by reality.

"THE KNOWING is a wonderfully written romance, a time-hopping supernatural mystery, and an all-around good time--a worthy addition to Brit Lunden's Bulwark anthology." - Lisa Butts for IndieReader

"Lunden'scharacters feel real, and their interactions make the story work quite well. Her plot is engaging and suitably dark, making this an entertaining urban fantasy tale. The Knowing: A Bulwark Anthology is a well written and engrossing read. It's most highly recommended." - Jack Magnus, Readers' Favorite

"Romance
devotees looking for a quick, colorful read should consider The Knowing, which might spark interest in checking out the preceding novella and other installments in the Bulwark Anthology, all of which
are currently available in paperback and ebook." - BlueInk Reviews

An interesting read and wonderful first addition to what seems to be an anthology with much promise. - Insatiable Readers (blog)

The skillful storytelling brings the characters to life and provides a highly immersive reading experience... I strongly urge you to read Brit Lunden's original novella Bulwark as well,
which sets the stage for all the characters in the anthology and offers more excitement for fans of paranormal thrillers. - Ice Fairy's Treasure Chest (blog)

"The Knowing, as its title suggests, makes a compelling pull in such a short space of pages, absolutely filled with emotion and conveying a powerfully romantic story line in sharp contrast to the previous book, but also very fitting of the town and its tone. Readers seeking an immersive new series where they can experience all different story types within the same, dark mysterious world are certain to love The Knowing and the Bulwark Anthology in general." - K. C. Finn, Readers' Favorite

"The story is brief yet impactful as the details included and the images they paint are emotionally evocative. The wisdom of characters such as Bear Bryant shines through and adds a beautiful touch to the already delightful love story. The intensity of JB and Ellie's relationship plus the paranormal aspects of their story makes it even more enthralling. The Knowing by Brit Lunden is a well-told tantalizing read." Edith Wairimu, Readers' Favorite

"It is a beautifully written love story encompassing the present, past, and even past lives. It is a romance with a hint of the supernatural. It is well written with a level of area building and character development often unseen in shorter books. It was easy to read this in one sitting; the story is sweet, intriguing, and sometimes moving. It has certainly piqued my interest in other books by this author, especially the Bulwark, from which this story stems. " K.J. Simmill, Readers' Favorite

 "The engaging tale's centerpiece is the teens' romance, with a Southern setting the author masterfully captures... The unadorned prose and concise descriptions make for a quick read all the way to the
bittersweet ending... A short but undeniably charming love story." - Kirkus Reviews 

"When two people find each other and then lose each other, it sometimes takes extraordinary happenings to bring them back together. "The Knowing" is a quick little story underwritten with the paranormal, and this keeps readers guessing. What could possibly go wrong in this strange world?" - Long And Short Reviews

"For those readers looking for a fast-paced paranormal mystery novel with excellent, vivid descriptive elements, this is a great choice for you. I believe that Brit Lunden's works are destined to become a classic in paranormal short story fiction." - Patricia Lynn Dompieri, Lemon Bee & Other Peculiar Tales

 Barnes & Noble → https://bit.ly/38gvppU





SCRIMMAGE
BULWARK, GEORGIA – PRESENT DAY



JB closed the door gently, glad to have the place to himself again. Sheriff Clay Finnes had taken the injured couple to the hospital.

The only sound in the cabin was the creak of the wooden floors settling and the tick of the antique regulator clock that hung on the wall.

It was an old clock and had never worked very well. JB smiled, thinking Ellie would be pleased to see the ornate second hand traveling around the parchment-colored face and the great brass pendulum swinging again.

It must have been set off when he slammed the door shut after he had escorted that ungrateful wretch out of his house. What a creep, calling his wife a witch, of all things. Didn’t she know not to speak ill of the dead?

He recalled that there was a key lying around somewhere. His wife used to wind that clock every so often and then stand next to it pleading hopefully, “Tick, pretty please!”

The old mechanism would give a muffled gong, move a minute or two, and then stall, making his diminutive wife steam up like a teapot.

It was her great-great-grandmother’s, the only piece of her family history willed to her. The rest went to her brother, who married a Northerner and didn’t disappoint the family.

That old clock was made by none other than George Mitchell of Bristol, Connecticut, at the beginning of the nineteenth century.

JB concentrated on the etching painted on the reverse glass of the case. It was a pastoral scene, with women holding parasols and men wearing pantaloons and beaver top hats. He noticed the mahogany case was layered with a coating of dust. He ran a crooked finger down the top, leaving a trail. It’s been neglected, he thought and shook his head. His right knee twinged, and he chuckled, like me.

JB had seen many clocks like this one in his day. Despite its Yankee past, every family around here worth their salt had a similar one in their home, to be handed down through the ages.

Every family except his, perhaps. His family had left him nothing.

JB grabbed a rag on the way to the living room, wiping the water rings from the surface of the coffee table. He’d given the victims of the car accident coasters, but they had carelessly placed them on the surface of the furniture. He’d made that piece for his wife from a tree felled by Hurricane Agnes in ’72.

That tree had nearly killed them all, landing on the back of the cottage and taking out the kitchen and half of the dining room with it. JB had gotten his wife and kids out just in time, hiding in the underground root cellar until the worst of the storm had passed.

His eyes smarted now, and he swiped them with a gnarled hand, his loud sniff filling the silence.

He glanced up, blinking several times to clear his eyes, and focused on the picture of Ellie. He picked it up, his hand caressing the face, wishing he could feel her skin.

How dare she? he thought again, bitterly. How dare that woman say his beloved was a witch?

Ellie Straton was the sweetest woman to grace the earth, and JB missed her with every fiber of his being.

JB shut his eyes, too tired to think. His mind kept replaying the earlier part of the day over and over again.

He wanted to go back in time and ignore the sound of the blaring horn.

He could still recall the commotion outside that had interrupted his late-afternoon news program.

Grabbing a shotgun, he had thrown on an old sweater and navigated the rickety steps out of the cottage. He had struggled down the path leading to the main road, gripping his gun tightly.

A cold snap in the weather had made his old injury act up, slowing his movements and leaving him sleepless at night. Still, he had hefted the gun close since one couldn’t be too careful. He had paused for a minute to give the clearing by the woods a good look. It was only yesterday he had seen a wolf lurking in a thicket at the end of his property.

He’d have to remember to tell the sheriff about it.

JB was sure that wolves were extinct in this part of Georgia.

At first, he had reckoned it might be a stray. He knew Bobby Ray and Trout Parker kept a pack of mongrels that annoyed most of the local farmers. Those mutts were known to raid the chicken houses, wreaking havoc on the best layers in the county.

He thought about the animal he had seen yesterday. It could have been a dog. He felt himself wavering. No it was definitely a wolf. He shook his head. It was one big, bad-looking wolf.

Frankly, he wasn’t used to seeing much of anything on this side of town.

Most people stayed on the other end of Bulwark, especially since that smelly, green puddle had appeared out of nowhere.

He had reported stagnant water as soon as he had noticed it about ten days ago, but nobody cared.

It was on the Old Jericho Road that folks didn’t travel anymore. Everyone knew the street had fallen out of use when the mill shut down years ago.

JB shook his craggy head. People had no business traveling in that direction. Strange stories had always come from that end of the county, even before he was born.

Some claimed spirits walked the woods and meadows; others said evil lurked there. Either way, from the time he was knee-high and the size of a tree stump, he knew to stay away.

Even talking about it gave him the willies, and that took a lot.

There was very little that frightened JB Straton, but for as long as he could remember, going into that neck of the woods was considered forbidden. Not that he believed in mumbo-jumbo. But somehow he had always taken those warnings seriously. Damn, if he couldn’t explain it, nobody could.

JB Straton considered himself a rational man most of the time. However, there were those instances that gave him pause, especially with Ellie.

JB surveyed the growing pond filling the roadway, the shrill blast of the car horn making his heart beat a little faster in his chest. That sound could only mean someone was in trouble.

JB had looked for a source of the spreading water but didn’t see where it started.

He knew the puddle was far from the creek that ran parallel to the back of his home. It was apparent it wasn’t coming from there. Besides, that water was pure and clean, and this looked like sewage to him.

Only last week it had started as a puddle, and today, it looked like it had grown into a small pond, he grumbled. The smell was intolerable, the greenish color made it look like industrial waste.

Clay Finnes should have come earlier and investigated, he said to himself at the time.

He liked Clay well enough, had even voted for him. But maybe taking on the top job as sheriff was too much for the man. JB knew Clay was understaffed from budget cuts, and of course, there was that business about his child and his disintegrating marriage. Sad stuff, kidnapping, right here in safe little Bulwark.

Cries mixed with the discordant sound of the horn had brought him back to himself. JB slid down the embankment, landing in ankle- deep ooze.

He had slipped, catching himself but feeling the tight tendons on his leg protest. Cursing strangers, overgrown puddles, and his own bum knees, he had made his way resentfully toward the water. He had halted at the edge, considering his options.

A lone car, a Ford Fusion, was stuck in the middle of the quagmire. City folk, he muttered under his breath. Any sensible country person would never attempt to drive through deep water like that unless they had a truck.

A woman calf-deep in the water was trying to pull a man from the driver’s side. JB shook his head grimly. The origin of the noise was her companion’s head pressed against the steering wheel.

“Hey!” JB had called. “Hey, is everything okay?”

The stranger had looked in his direction, her eyes unfocused. She waved her hands. She was shouting something, but he could barely hear her.

He had squinted at her, turning his better ear in her direction to try to catch what she was saying.

She had screeched about her children and witches.

Witches? He had huffed. Another nutjob looking for entertainment at the expense of the locals. Last year, a film crew all the way from Hollywood had camped out on the edge of Sam Holsteam’s farm, searching for the ghosts from a Civil War battle said to have occurred there.

The cast and crew had skedaddled quickly enough, screaming bloody murder. Everybody in town knew the film crew had left pasty-faced and hungover from Sam’s peach moonshine. City slickers, he had snickered, couldn’t handle a good jug of’shine.

“Do you need help?” he had shouted to the woman.

This time, when she had looked at him, he had noticed a thin line of blood trickling from her hairline.

JB had patted his back pocket. He had hissed under his breath, calling himself five kinds of fool.

He’d forgotten that blasted cell phone his kid insisted he keep on him at all times in case he fell or something.

JB had bent awkwardly, placing the gun on the dry part of the incline and then gingerly stepping into the slimy puddle. He had realized that he had never changed into boots as his slippers filled with cold water.

Gritting his teeth, he had fought the urge to leave. Why hadn’t he removed the slippers? Ellie had bought those slippers for him their last Christmas together. Now, they’d be ruined; his jaw twitched with resentment.

JB had waded toward the vehicle as the woman grew increasingly incoherent. As he had moved her out of the way, one of her flailing hands had caught him on the side of his head, and JB swore he heard bells ringing.

“No, stop it, woman. I’m here to help.”

He had held her by both her shoulders, trying to reason with her, but she had looked as dazed as Johnny Gottfried had when he collided with a linebacker and suffered the worst concussion the NFL had ever recorded.

Her eyes had rolled in their sockets, and he saw her face drain of what little color it had. He had shaken her gently. “Now, don’t go and faint on me, ma’am. I can’t carry you both.”

This had seemed to reach her, and she had whimpered.

She had grabbed the collar of his sweater, her bloody fingers poking holes in the fragile weave.

“My children . . . my children. Wicked, wicked place.” She had looked like a wild woman, her mouth stretched in a soundless scream.

She had snagged a thread on his sweater when she grabbed him, loosening it. JB had watched it unravel and fought the urge to brush her away. Ellie had knitted this sweater. How much more was this day going to cost him?

JB had taken a steadying breath and then patiently turned the woman in the direction of his house. He had given her a poke to the center of her back. “Go there.” He had pointed up the embankment. “I’ll get your husband out.”

He had watched her slog through the water to the other side, her head lowered.

Satisfied she was making progress; he had turned back to the man. His head rested against the steering wheel, his eyes were closed, and his skin had a faint bluish cast.

“Mister?” JB had called over the noise of the horn. He had touched the skin of the man’s neck, recoiling at the clammy feel. This was not looking very good.

JB had wavered with the idea of moving him. He realized the water was now inching up over JB’s thighs.

Again, he had looked for the source of the water, but had seen nothing except a widening greenish body of muck.

The door to the car was open and rapidly flooding with water. JB reached in, and using his upper body strength attempted to move the man. He couldn’t budge him. JB placed his shoulder under the victim’s arm and half dragged the man from the vehicle. He had been rewarded with a low groan, but the victim had definitely been nothing more than dead weight.

He had managed to get the couple into his cottage, wrap them both in blankets, and call the sheriff.

Tea with brandy had revived the wife enough for her to notice her surroundings.

It was then that she had focused on his Ellie’s picture on the mantle and had accused his wife of stealing her children. Sheriff Clay Finnes had arrived just then, as his patience was wearing thin, along with that pushy news reporter Dayna Dalton. The injured couple was taken away, and he was left to the thick silence that felt like a comforting old blanket.

He was well rid of the intruders and now looked around his peaceful home, wishing his unwanted guests a speedy recovery along with the hope that he never had to set eyes on them again.

JB shuffled over to his recliner, his worn knees protesting.

He had changed his clothes after the whole hullabaloo but still felt chilled to the bone. Took a long time to warm this old body, he remembered ruefully.

He rubbed the skin of his thigh, the site of another football injury so horrible the bone had snapped and torn through his skin. What was it, forty-four or forty-five years ago?

He remembered waking from surgery, Ellie’s hand brushing his forehead, her soft voice assuring him his football career had not ended.

He cleared his throat noisily, tears smarting his eyes, happy that Ellie wasn’t here to witness it. How dare that woman accuse his wife of being a witch? Not his Ellie, his soul mate, his life.










The Inspiration Behind The Knowing

I was approached by a group of authors who wanted to do an anthology. We picked a genre and I got right to work. I created the fictional town of Bulwark where strange things happen. Sheriff Clay Finnes standing in a puddle of weird, green muck came to me then. I saw his deputy and the opening chapter puts you right in the middle of Mayberry gone mad.

The story developed and I had no idea where it was going to go, but before I knew it, I was immersed in a strange tale of kidnappings, hellhounds, and a plot that eerily resembled an adult Hansel and Gretel. 

The story was rich with characters that were ripe for spin-offs. I did that for the other authors to pull threads for their own novellas. Unfortunately, no one but me finished the book.  

A year later, a new group approached and soon eight books were added to the series. I started my next part of the anthology from a character in the second chapter of Bulwark. JB Straton, an ex-football star recalls his romance with his wife and travels through time to find her. 

Once everybody was done with their books, one character bothered me. I had portrayed Dayna Dalton in such an uncomplimentary light, it interrupted my sleep. She demanded a voice to tell the story from her point of view. I began her story and started the book thinking it would go in one direction, but Dayna had other plans, and took me on a different path.

I loved writing this book. It’s a story about perceptions, judgments, and redemption. All my books contain a twist, and I hope the readers enjoy it as much as I did!




Brit Lunden is a prolific author who’s written over 50 books in assorted genres under different pen names. Bulwark was her first effort in adult fiction and was chosen by several of her fellow authors as the basis for a new series, A Bulwark Anthology.  Using her characters, they are creating new denizens in spin-off stories to this bizarre town. Brit Lunden lives on Long Island in a house full of helpful ghosts.

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Journey To Osm - The Blue Unicorn's Tale Reader Review - Quite Thrilling

Journey To Osm - The Blue Unicorn's Tale

 Reader Review






Victoria Maposa

Journey to Osm: The Blue Unicorn's Tale by Sybrina Durant is a magical fantasy story that is well written. The plot of the story begins when Miral gives birth to a unicorn with neither metal nor magic. Not only that, the baby unicorn is small and weak. This is after Alumna, the oracle, had received a vision that the baby unicorn would grow to be strong. What then, given his current stature, was he going to do if confronted with the worst Magh army?

I loved how the author built her characters and scenes gradually, pulling me in with each page. Also, the story is quite thrilling. It kept me at the edge of my seat the whole time. I can definitely see this being turned into a movie. That you Sybrina Durant for such a great read!


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Saturday, February 15, 2020

Something To Celebrate!



Time to Celebrate a Major Milestone


 Over 100K monthly Viewers on my Pinterest boards. Check them out for yourself. You might just find something you love! https://www.pinterest.com/sybrinad/boards/




Unicorn Reader - Unicorn Writer Collection - Reading And Writing Is Magical

Unicorn Reader - Unicorn Writer 

Tees and Notebook Collection

 What is a Unicorn Reader? 

It is someone who relishes reading anything that sends the mind soaring to new realms.  It is someone who dives so deeply  into their books that they imagine themselves the main character of every fantasy they read - whether they’re flying with dragons, riding unicorn steeds or sailing through the cosmos in gleaming quantum ships.  Are you a unicorn reader?


Every Unicorn Knows Reading Is Magical

Tee Shirt

 This tee shirt is available from Sybrina Publishing on Amazon in many 
sizes, styles and colors for men, women and kids.


Or Maybe You're A Unicorn Writer...

Unicorn Writers are just like unicorn readers except they're the ones making the supreme effort to put their thoughts into physical form.  Here's something for you unicorn writers out there who don't mind who knows that you are an author.



This tee shirt is available from Sybrina Publishing on Amazon in many 

sizes, styles and colors for men, women and kids.


Get The Matching Notebook, Too


This Unicorn Writers was designed with you in mind. 100 sheets - 200 pages, 8 1/2" x 11" Blank Lined Unicorn Reader / Unicorn Writer Blank Notebook & Journal gives you lots of room to write your thoughts. Unicorn Writer Journals make great gifts for all unicorn lovers.





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sizes and styles matching Unicorn Writer Tees.  

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Friday, February 14, 2020

Meet This Book - Saving Eden by K R S McEntire



Meet This Book



Saving Eden:

A YA Dystopian / Post-Apocalyptic Adventure

By K. R. S. McEntire


☆°•*☆*•°☆°•*☆*•°☆

Sixteen-year-old Angela and her father are the last survivors on earth. She dreams of adventure and romance but only finds it in books. In the confines of her garden paradise, she’s untouched by contaminants that caused the rest of humanity to mutate into murderous beasts or die. But staying in the garden sure gets lonely.


When a seventeen-year-old boy stumbles upon Angela’s home with news about a thriving community, his presence challenges everything she knew about the world. She dares to leave her garden for the first time to find a better home.


In the authoritarian society that she finds the line between man and mutant is murkier than she expected. Secrets from Angela's past reemerge, and she learns life outside the garden isn't all it's cracked up to be. Her father is in danger, and the men tasked with protecting the settlement are extremely fond of murder. With their lives on the line, can Angela create one last happy ending in a hopeless world?


Fans of dystopian societies, post-apocalyptic futures, diverse characters, fantasy, and coming-of-age adventures with heart will fall in love with this post-apocalyptic fairy tale.

Reader Reviews:

"This debut novel was filled with vivid descriptions. The author takes readers on a dystopian journey through hell and back. I was rooting for Angela the entire time! My favorite part is the message of hope laced through the bleak atmosphere of the world portrayed in the story. This is a great YA dystopian tale with some almost magical twists you don’t want to miss."

“I absolutely enjoyed reading “Saving Eden,” I found a lot of heart-gripping moments and chuckles as I saw an adventure unroll on the pages.” 

“This is such a great book! The main character, Angela, is reminiscent of Rapunzel in her dreaming of what exists beyond the garden she's grown up in. However, Angela can't help but to wonder what else the world has to offer her. A fairy tale meets a dystopian landscape where everyone is just searching for their own happy ending.“
You can read this book for FREE if you have Kindle Unlimited! 

 About The Author
K. R. S. McEntire

K. R. S. McEntire lives on a healthy diet of fiction and tea. She loves art, photography and travel because, like books, they allow her to explore new worlds. She lives in Indianapolis with her husband and runs the Facebook page Diverse Fantasy and Sci-Finds, where she shares book recommendations with other bibliophiles.  Follow her Amazon Page.

This Book Has Been Introduced To You By 
Unicorn Author and Entrepreneur, Sybrina Durant, 
Who Believes In The Concept of Authors Helping Authors

https://www.amazon.com/shop/influencer-6257530a

If you have a clean sci-fi or fantasy book that you would like Sybrina to share with her readers, send an email to sybrina@phrasethesaurus.com with Meet This Book in the Subject Line.