Dr. Nekros Now On Kindle!

I’m very excited to announce the arrival of Dr. Nekros to the Amazon Kindle!

Dr. Nekros is a ghost hunter with a terribly scarred face.  He travels the countryside in a haunted 1936 Packard, a car for which he rarely gets along.  To make matters worse, his ex-wife Zetta reappears after thirteen years of separation, and she has a rather unusual demand.  But how will her re-emergence alter Dr. Nekros’ investigations, and, more importantly, his true objective?

The plight of Dr. Nekros will span three volumes with each volume comprised of six episodes.  Each episode will be released two months apart.  This is the beginning of a three year odyssey!

This series is exclusive to the Amazon Kindle as well as Kindle applications, and each episode will cost $00.99.

Join me as we explore the next phase of Dr. Nekros and Zetta’s relationship, the cause of Dr. Nekros’ disfigurement, how the Packard came to be haunted, why Zetta would leave her beloved husband and adored children, and Dr. Nekros’ real mission.  There will be love, betrayal, monsters, reunions, ghosts, trickery, revenge, death, black magic, and battles … But will there be salvation?

Discover Dr. Nekros in the very first episode entitled “The Tragedian.”  Simply follow the link and enjoy!

http://www.amazon.com/Dr-Nekros-Tragedian-Episode-ebook/dp/B004TAEV8Y/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1301012919&sr=1-1-spell

Of The Farm by John Updike – A Book Review

Of The Farm details the complex relationship between a son in his mid-thirties and his elderly mother.  The son brings his new wife and her son from a previous marriage to his mother’s remote farm, and it’s obvious from the beginning that the mother and the wife are not going to get along.

Though a brief novel, Updike delivers an intricate and dramatic story peeling away the complicated layers that make up relationships.  Throughout the book, the man is constantly on alert, hoping to defuse any arguments between the women in his life, but he refuses to stand up to his mother nor does he seem totally invested in being committed to his wife.

In fact, the man is an incredibly interesting character because he is so flawed, so monumentally incapable of mediating the warring women in a healthy manner, that he almost leaps off the page.  Surely he’ll remind you of someone you know … perhaps even yourself.  The women were also expertly written, something that doesn’t always happen with a male author.  I found the mother and wife realistic, respectable, and equally as flawed as the main character.

Though lacking any real physical action, Updike’s study of mothers and sons and husbands and wives is wickedly enticing and, as always, written very well.