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Kindle Nation Bargain Book Alert! Melissa Foster’s CHASING AMANDA is our Kindle eBook of the Day – 4.8 Stars on 56 out of 57 Rave Reviews, Just $2.99 on Kindle!

Find out now why 56 out of 57 Amazon reviewers have given rave reviews to Melissa Foster’s Chasing Amanda, just $2.99 on Kindle!

Here’s the set-up: 


Nine years ago, Molly Tanner witnessed a young girl’s abduction in the busy city of Philadelphia, shifting her occasional clairvoyance into overdrive. Two days later, the girl’s body was found, and Molly’s life fell apart.

Consumed by guilt for not acting upon her visions, and on the brink of losing her family, Molly escaped the torturous reminders in the city, fleeing to the safety of the close-knit rural community of Boyds, Maryland.

Molly’s life is back on track, her son has begun college, and she and her husband have finally rekindled their relationship. Their fresh start is shattered when a seven-year-old girl disappears from a local park near Molly’s home.
Unable to turn her back on another child and troubled by memories of the past, Molly sets out to find her, jeopardizing the marriage she’d fought so hard to hold together. While unearthing clues and struggling to decipher her visions, Molly discovers another side of Boyds, where the residents–and the land itself–hold potentially lethal secrets, and exposes another side of her husband, one that threatens to tear them apart.
From the reviewers:

“…a story of madness and mystery that drew me in from the first paragraph…a tale of love, retribution, hope and betrayal…a page turner that will leave you breathless and can’t be put down…” –Readers Round Table
“[Foster’s] newest release captivated me. [It] covers a subject that is every parent’s nightmare. The story had me hooked and shocked. The characters are well written.” –Jeanette Stingley, Women’s Literary Editor, Bella Online
Melissa Foster has truly done it again. Weaving the reader through the intricate dealings with relationships, but also bringing twists and turns to the plot to keep you from putting the book down! A must read! — J.M. Reed
Melissa Foster is the author of two novels, Megan’s Way and Chasing Amanda. Megan’s Way is currently being adapted to film, won the 2011 Beach Book Award, and was named Finalist, 2010 Next Generation Indie Book Awards. Both Megan’s Way and Chasing Amanda are Nominees for the 2011 Dan Poynter Global eBook Awards.
Melissa is the founder of the Women’s Nest, a social and support community for women, and is currently collaborating with a director to create a script for Megan’s Way. Melissa is working on her next book, and lives in Maryland with her family.
Melissa is available to chat with book clubs and welcomes comments and emails from her readers. Visit Melissa on The Women’s Nest or her personal website.
Comments from Melissa:

Hello everyone! I grew up in Maryland with my mother, a slew of wonderful brothers, and friends. I am passionate about writing, reading, living healthy, and helping others do the same, and enjoy just about anything outdoors. I love to chat with readers and welcome your comments and suggestions. Feel free to email me. You can also catch me on The Women’s Nest, user name, “Thinkhappy.”
And here, in the comfort of your own browser, is your free sample:


Enjoy a Free Excerpt of our Thriller of the Week: ZOMBIESTAN by Mainak Dhar – 4.4 Stars on 12 of 14 Rave Reviews, just 99 cents on Kindle!

Zombiestan by Mainak Dhar
In
a terrifying, wasted world, four unlikely companions have been thrown
together — including a Navy Seal, an aging writer, and a young girl
trying to keep her 3-year-old brother safe. When they discover that the
smallest amongst them holds the key to removing the scourge that
threatens to destroy their world, they begin an epic journey to a
rumoured safe zone high in the Himalayas. A journey through a wasteland
now known as Zombiestan.

An Excerpt From Our Thriller of the Week, Zombiestan by Mainak Dhar

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Copyright © 2011 by Mainak Dhar and published here with his permission

ONE

Mullah Omar sat down for what would be the last meal of his life.

Of
course, at that point he had no way of knowing that this would be last
time he would have his frugal meal of dates, bread and figs, but years
of living on the run from the Americans had taught him that death could
be lurking around any corner. Death was not something that worried him,
but the one fear he did have was that he would not be able to see his
plans through. The men he was meeting today were his best and perhaps
his last hope that he may yet live to see the day when the Taliban once
again ruled over Afghanistan and that the Americans paid dearly for the
devastation they had brought upon his people. Next to him was a man who
looked like a portly college professor, with thick glasses, and a
flowing white beard, sharing in his meal.

Ayman Al-Zawahiri looked at Omar, sensing the man’s apprehension about coming into the open.

‘My brother, eat well. After today, we will feast as our enemies burn and rot!’

Omar
just shrugged and continued eating. Al-Zawahiri may have sounded
confident, but he had his own fears to contend with. After Osama Bin
Laden had been killed just months earlier in a US raid on his hideout in
Abbotabad, Al-Zawahiri had been whisked away by his minders in the
Pakistani Inter Services Intelligence from his safehouse in Peshawar to a
small village on the Pakistan-Afghanistan border. Both Al Qaeda leaders
had been given sanctuary in Pakistan by elements of the Pakistani
Intelligence agency, but with the daring US raid to kill Osama in the
heart of Pakistan, his minders had told him they could no longer
guarantee his safety. Al-Zawahiri had tried to reach out to the Al Qaeda
foot soldiers, confident that he could take on the mantle of leadership
that Osama had once worn but was shocked when they paid him no heed. He
didn’t have the charisma, the vision, or so he heard of them whispering
when he was not around. That was why he had hatched this plan, one so
audacious that even Osama would never have dreamed of it, and co-opted
Mullah Omar, who had come out of hiding in the caves to join him in
organizing the mission. He knew that without Mullah Omar’s help in
organizing logistics and security inside Afghanistan and Pakistan, his
plan would never get off the ground.

The
four men with them looked much like Mullah Omar, gaunt and lean from
years of living as fugitives in their own land, wearing black turbans
that the Taliban favoured, and armed to the teeth. Compared to them,
their two visitors looked woefully out of place. They were overweight,
dressed in ill fitting suits and looked out of breath and tired from the
journey that had brought them from Pakistan to the small hut nestled on
a perch in the Shahikot valley in Afghanistan.

One
of them tried to say something, as if anxious to get the business he
had come for over with, but Mullah Omar silenced him with a single wave
of his hand. He never liked being disturbed while eating. That was a
habit he had picked up from his mercurial friend. Osama’s memory stung
as Mullah Omar recalled how the Americans had shot his friend dead in
cold blood. He had no great love for the fat Egyptian doctor who fancied
himself a revolutionary and thought he could fill Osama’s boots, but he
was willing to help in a plan that would both avenge Osama’s death and
bring the Taliban back to power in Afghanistan.

Al-Zawahiri turned to one of the Pakistanis.

‘Now, show me what you’ve brought.’

The man he had addressed was sweating profusely despite the cold outside, and wiped at his brow with a handkerchief.

‘We want to serve the struggle against the infidels. That’s why we are here.’

Mullah
Omar’s eyes narrowed as he studied the man. A soft, city bred, corrupt
government scientist. Intelligence had shown that in spite all his
claims of piety, he indulged in loose women and gambling. Mullah Omar
shook his head sadly at what things had come to. Just a few years ago, a
sinner such as this would have been stoned to death. Now he not only
had to deal with them, but had to pay them.

‘Hamid,
I know all about how pious you are. The five million dollars you seek
are with us. Now, just show me what you have and let’s all get out of
here.’

The
man called Hamid motioned to his companion, who had been sitting a few
feet behind him. The man got up and asked the Taliban bodyguards to help
him. Two of the black turbaned men helped him pull two heavy boxes into
the middle of the room. Mullah Omar studied the boxes curiously. He had
never received formal education and to him, the babblings the
scientists subjected him to meant nothing. He knew that science was
nothing before the will of Allah. Otherwise how would a mere village
preacher like him have been blessed with the opportunity to lead the
faithful in Afghanistan? That conviction had helped him keep his faith
even after the infidels had invaded his land and scattered his men.

Hamid
started talking, something about Caesium 137 bought from the Chechens,
Uranium from Pakistani stocks, Botolinum from Libya and something called
Tetrodotoxin. Mullah Omar felt his head hurting from the complicated
words, and then stopped Hamid.

‘I
know nothing of all of this. I just want to know if what you claim this
can do for us is true. Abu Jafar, is this as these men claim?’

The
man called Abu Jafar leaned towards Mullah Omar. He may have looked
like the other Taliban bodyguards, but he was in fact a biotechnology
doctorate from an Ivy League university. He had spent the first thirty
years of his life as an unremarkable Iraqi immigrant in the US, working
as a researcher at a leading pharmaceutical company. The wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan and the exhortations of the preacher at his local mosque
had brought him into the fold, and with his education and
qualifications, Osama and Mullah Omar had realized he was meant for
greater missions than strapping on a bomb and blowing himself up.

‘I have confirmed it. If we use these wisely, we could bring the infidels to their knees.’

Al-Zawahiri,
an educated man unlike Omar, was rubbing his hands in satisfaction.
Before coming to the meeting, he had done his research on the material
these Pakistani scientists claimed to have. He knew that used correctly,
they could devastate the West. The Americans had made such a fuss about
Weapons of Mass Destruction, and even destroyed Iraq hunting for
fictional WMDs. Now Al-Zawahiri would show them what Mass Destruction
really meant- when several Western capitals were all hit simultaneously,
each with a different weapon. He smiled at Hamid.

‘Then Allah has indeed shown us the way. Give these men their just rewards and send them on their way.’

Mullah
Omar and Al-Zawahiri retreated to the back of the hut while two of the
Taliban bodyguards stepped behind the Pakistanis and shot them once each
in the back of the head.

‘Muzzle flashes! I see muzzle flashes, Sir!’

Captain
David Bremsak immediately held up his high-powered binoculars to take a
closer look at the hut. He could see nothing inside, but he trusted
Dan, the sniper in his small four man team. If Dan had seen muzzle
flashes inside then it was clear that the hut was occupied by someone
other than a shepherd taking an afternoon nap. He turned to the bearded
man wearing dark wraparound sunglasses to his left.

‘Mike, I think we have ourselves something here.’

Mike Fotiou just nodded with a slight smile and picked up his portable radio.

‘Eagle Eye, confirm hostile targets at the last co-ordinates we sent.’

There was a click in response, as Mike took off his glasses and looked at David with his blue eyes.

‘You know what I could really do with? A cold beer and some juicy steak.’

David
laughed. They had been trekking in the mountains of the Paktia province
of Afghanistan for the last fifteen days, living off their rations and
the land. They were members of the secretive Task Force 121, created to
hunt down HVTs, so called High Value Targets, in the seemingly
never-ending `war on terror’. Osama was dead and fish food by now, but
his acolytes were hard at work, and David’s job was to hunt them down.

David reached into his pack and took out some chewing gum.

‘This is the best I can offer by way of hospitality.’

Mike
popped it into his mouth and smiled. The two other men also took the
gum that David passed around. Dan already had his eyes glued to the
scope of his M82A1 Barrett sniper rifle, while the fourth man, Rob, was
to his right, his own M4 carbine at his shoulder. The four of them had
been inserted into the area when a local informant had passed on news
that Mullah Omar, the one-eyed Taliban leader and Ayman Al-Zawahiri,
Osama’s deputy, were both reputed to be on the move. In the world of
HVTs, that was about as high as it got, and their mission was to report
in on movements, and call in air strikes if they found anything.

David
saw that Mike had his own M4 at the ready by his side. In his two years
with TF121, David had worked with a lot of other spooks, but what made
Mike better than most CIA desk jockeys who joined them on missions was
the fact that he had been an Army Ranger before joining the CIA’s
Special Activities Division. He might be a spook now, but he was at
heart a warrior like them.

‘Holy shit!’

David turned to Dan.

‘What the hell did you see? A ghost?’

‘Even better, Sir. Frigging Mullah Omar just stepped out to take a leak.’

David
stared through his binoculars with incredulity. There was no mistaking
the face he had studied a dozen times or more in pre-mission briefings.
Yes, there he was, Mullah Mohammed Omar, the leader of the Taliban,
standing a kilometer away with his pants literally around his knees. It
would have been funny if they did not have some deadly serious business
to attend to. David’s orders were clear on what they were expected to do
if they did encounter any HVTs. He turned to Dan even as Mike asked
Eagle Eye to launch.

‘Dan, take the shot.’

Specialist
Daniel Barnett took a deep breath and then fired a single shot. The
fifty-caliber bullet fired from the Barrett sniper rifle was designed to
punch through light armour. What it did to Mullah Omar’s head was not a
pretty sight. The Taliban bodyguards inside saw their leader fall a
split second before they heard the unmistakable report of a heavy weapon
being fired. They were about to rush out when two Hellfire missiles
slammed into the hut, fired by a Predator drone loitering thousands of
feet and a couple of miles away. The explosions incinerated everyone and
everything inside.

David
had seen more than his share of fighting and killing in his ten years
as a Navy SEAL and then with Task Force 121 but this was by far the most
exhilarating mission he had ever been a part of. His mind was reeling
at the implications of what they had achieved. With Mullah Omar gone, it
was more than likely that the Taliban would cease to be the more or
less unified force they had been, and perhaps more amenable to a peace
deal with the Americans. And if Al-Zawahiri had indeed been with him,
then killing him just months after Osama, would cripple Al Qaeda. With
this one mission in the mountains of Afghanistan, they may just have
changed the course of history.

‘Pack up, boys. We don’t want to be around when the Taliban get here.’

As
silently as they had come, the four men picked up their gear and began
their hour long trek through the jagged peaks and narrow passes to reach
their exfiltration point, where a chopper was en route to pick them up.
They were deep in enemy territory and as much as they would have liked
to go in closer to verify their kills, the Predator overhead had already
warned them of approaching Taliban forces.

Half
an hour after they had left, three pick up trucks climbed the pass
leading to the hut. More than twenty heavily armed, black-turbaned
Taliban warriors leapt out, weapons at the ready. But when they saw that
they were too late to save their leader, several of them sat down,
stunned and in shock. From the last truck emerged four men who looked
totally out of place. They were all dressed in western clothes, two of
them were white and two were black. They were Al Qaeda’s most prized
foreign operators. Men who had been born and bred in Western society,
but had converted to the cause along the way. Men who had western
identities and passports and could carry their jihad deep into the
infidel’s lands. They were to have been the carriers of the deadly
cocktail of poisons Al-Zawahiri had come to take delivery of.

They
stood looking at the burnt remains of the hut and the men who had
assembled there. None of them had known about the exact contents of what
special weapons their leaders had themselves come down to take delivery
of, and many of the uneducated Taliban warriors poked at the wreckage
at random till one of the Western Jihadis told them to be more careful.
One of the Americans wondered aloud if the American Predators were still
overhead and if they should just get away as fast as possible. The
Taliban were going to have none of that. They had lost their leaders,
and were now collecting body parts, intent on giving Mullah Omar a
fitting burial. One or two of the Westerners tried to reason with them
that getting away immediately was the only sensible thing to do, but the
illiterate Taliban soldiers pointed their guns at them and told them to
wait. The grisly task took fifteen minutes, their hands cut and chafed
in many places as they sorted through the charred remains. Unknown to
them, they both inhaled and ingested into their bloodstreams a cocktail
of some of the most deadly toxins known to man.

The Taliban were silent, many of them in tears. Their Jihad had suffered a massive setback.

Little
did they realize that their Jihad was going to take on a horrifying new
dimension, and that they were to be the ones to strike the first blow
in it.

***

‘Mom, I said I’ll do it later.’

Mayukh
Ghosh put his headphones back on, satisfied that he had postponed yet
another plea by his mother to clean up his room. But this time, it
seemed that she was not going to be as easily put off as usual. The door
to his room swung open and his mother was there, hands on her hips.

‘Young man, you will listen to me when I ask you to do something.’

Mayukh
stopped playing on his PS3 to talk to his mother. When she started any
sentence with the words ‘young man’, it usually meant he was in bigger
trouble than usual.

‘Mom, it’s not a big deal. I’ll clean up my room over the weekend.’

His mother moved some of the CDs and sports magazines strewn across his bed and sat down on it.

‘This
isn’t just about your room. You’re seventeen now and you’ll be in
college soon. You need to start thinking more seriously about what you
want to do with your life. I mean, look at you.’

Mayukh sighed loudly, which only served to irritate his mother even more.

‘You
just loiter around with that good for nothing friend of yours and play
video games all day. You need to pay more attention to what your future
will be like.’

Mayukh had already tuned out. He had heard this lecture many times, and was in no mood to hear it again.

‘Mom,
I know what you’re going to say. All your friend’s kids are doing well
in school, they’re so well behaved, they all have a plan. I’m sorry I’m such a disappointment, all right?’

With
those words, he walked out of his room, slamming the door shut behind
him. He knew he would be in big trouble when he got back home, but for
now he just wanted to be by himself. He rode his bicycle for about
twenty minutes, the cold November air blasting into his face. Winter was
not yet fully upon Delhi, but pedaling as fast as he could, the wind
felt freezing. It was just what he needed to cool himself down. Finally,
his legs aching, he stopped to catch his breath. His usually curly and
long hair (another cause of his mother’s angst- why couldn’t he get a
haircut?) was now falling all over his face, and he wondered what was it
about parents, anyways? Whatever he did never seemed to be good enough.
And if they suddenly had discovered that he needed to be more
responsible, weren’t they to blame in any way?

Mayukh’s
father was a senior government officer and he had grown up surrounded
by people ready to do his father’s bidding, never having to work too
hard at anything. For his parents to suddenly wake up and demand that he
miraculously become independent was more than a bit unfair. He was now
old enough to realize that his father’s connections had got him into the
best schools, and had ensured that he never had to join a queue to do
anything. But he was not yet old enough to realize that one day, when
his father retired, he would have to learn to fend for himself without
that safety blanket.

However,
for now, he was content to sit at the nearby shop and drink some Coke
and curse the unfairness of it all. He asked the man for a cigarette,
and he hesitated as if sizing up how old Mayukh was. At close to six
feet tall, Mayukh was very tall for his age and together with a physique
that came from four years of playing football on the school team meant
that nobody could guess he had just turned seventeen. That was till they
looked closer at his face- for his eyes were still the open, trusting
eyes of a kid. But the shopkeeper was not interested in such subtleties
and passed on a Marlboro.

Mayukh
puffed away, imagining what his mother would do when she found out he
smoked on the sly once in a while. He didn’t like it much, and usually
coughed his guts out, but none of his friends would ever know that.

His mobile phone beeped and he picked it up. It was his best friend, Shiv.

‘Dude, are we on for our session tomorrow?’

‘Of course!’

Then, Mayukh remembered the mood his mother had been in, and added.

‘Hey Shiv, is it okay if we meet at your place instead?’

Many
things brought the two boys together- a love for cars, a fair distaste
for studies and above all else, a passion for gaming. They could spend
hours in front of their PS3s, joining forces in myriad online
battlegrounds, blasting away at whatever villains it threw at them. With
the mood his mother was in, Mayukh figured this time, it might be more
prudent to go over to Shiv’s place instead of sitting in front of the
PS3 in his room.

Mayukh
noticed the TV playing in a corner of the shop. There was a banner
scrolling across the bottom of the screen. One or two other people who
had come to buy cigarettes at the shop had stopped to watch. One of them
said aloud what was on all their minds.

‘That
is one screwed up country, isn’t it? First the Taliban, then bloody
Osama, then the American war, and now this. They should just nuke it and
end the misery.’

Mayukh
never spent too much time in front of the TV, least of all watching
news, but over the last twenty-four hours, there was no avoiding the
news that had been coming out of Afghanistan. It was all over the Net,
and all over every news channel. He could hear the newscaster read out
her lines.

‘The
US military has repeated that the sudden upsurge in violence following
the reported deaths of Mullah Omar and Ayam Al-Zawahiri is not a cause
for concern and represents the death throes of the Taliban and Al Qaeda
in Afghanistan.’

The screen cut away to a balding, white man in a military uniform.

‘We
won a major battle in our ongoing war on terror two days ago with the
strike that took out the top leadership of the Taliban and Al Qaeda. The
Taliban are now little more than disorganized rabble and the spate of
suicide bombings yesterday just show how desperate they are getting in
their attempts to destabilize Afghanistan and the progress the
democratically elected government has achieved. Our mission is on track
and I am confident that the day is not far when peace returns to
Afghanistan.’

Mayukh’s phone rang again. It was Shiv.

‘Dude, what do you want to play- Medal of Honor or Dead Rising?’

Mayukh sniggered.

‘Come on, Shiv, don’t try and change the game just because I keep wasting you on Medal of Honor.’

There was a pause before Shiv responded.

‘But I want to kill some zombies. I was reading this amazing book in which zombies come to life. Wouldn’t that be cool?’

Mayukh took a deep breath. Shiv was cool, but sometimes he just took everything too literally.

‘Shiv, zombies exist only in frigging video games. Speaking of which, we are on for tomorrow and I am going to whip your ass.’

***

Abu
Jindal, who had once been known as Nadir Dedoune, felt like crap. His
head hurt, he kept throwing up every hour or so, and his skin had taken
on a strange yellow complexion. As he looked at his reflection in the
window of a Duty Free shop at Karachi airport, he wondered what bug he
had picked up. Perhaps this had all been a stupid idea after all.
Growing up as an Algerian immigrant in a poor ghetto outside Paris, he
had never known anything other than grinding poverty. There were no
jobs, no opportunities, only the condescending and spiteful looks of the
rich white French. That was till he met Mullah Amir, who preached to
small groups of young men at the local mosque, and had opened Nadir’s
eyes to the atrocities being committed against Muslims around the world.
He had found a new meaning and purpose to his life- to wage Jihad
against these infidels. He had made the trip to Afghanistan to take part
in some mission that he had supposedly been chosen for. The running
around and firing of guns in a camp inside Pakistan had been fun enough,
but then he had been totally terrified by what he had seen after the
Predator strike that had killed Mullah Omar, Al-Zawahiri and the others.
His mission on hold, he had been told to leave immediately.

‘Emirates Flight 605 to Paris via Dubai is now ready for boarding.’

It
was 5:30 in the morning, and Nadir bought a cup of coffee. No sooner
had he taken a sip than he rushed to the bathroom, emptying the contents
of his stomach into the sink. When he had retched himself dry, he
washed his face, and then looked down to see clumps of hair in his hand.
There were a couple of bald patches on his head where the hair seemed
to have just come off.

What was happening to him?

All
he wanted to do now was to somehow get home and see a doctor. He took
out a cap and put it on to cover his hair. He tried sleeping through the
flight, though he had to get up three times even before the flight
reached Dubai to throw up. On the third occasion he saw blood in the
sink. The flight was delayed in Dubai by several hours, which made his
life even more miserable. A couple of hours after the flight had left
Dubai, the woman sitting next to him, bored of watching the Sun
gradually set over the horizon, turned to order a drink. She saw him
start to shake, as if having a fit.

‘Sir, are you okay?’

Nadir
couldn’t hear her. His eyes were glazed over and as he shook even more
violently, his cap fell off. He was now nearly hairless, his hair lying
in clumps all over his seat. As she watched in horror, boils seemed to
break out all over his body, oozing pus and blood. He then retched all
over the seat in front of him. Passengers screamed, and a Flight
Attendant shouted out whether there was a doctor on board. By the time a
doctor got to him, Nadir was lying lifeless, a ghastly apparition,
covered in his own vomit, pus and blood, a deformed, hairless yellowed
being where there had once been a handsome young man. The French doctor
felt for his pulse and then shook his head sadly at the Flight
Attendant.

‘Il est mort.’

There
were horrified gasps from several of the passengers who had gathered
around to see what was happening. They all began to move back to their
seats as the Flight Attendant wondered what to do with the body.
Suddenly one of the passengers exclaimed to the doctor.

‘Doctor, he’s speaking.’

‘C’est impossible!’

The
doctor leaned over near Nadir and saw that indeed his lips were moving.
There was still no pulse. He leaned closer to hear what he was saying.
He jerked back when he heard one word.

‘Jihad.’

Then Nadir’s eyes snapped open.

He
sat up calmly, as if nothing had happened, looked around, and grabbed
the black scarf from the Flight Attendant’s neck. He then proceeded to
calmly tie it around his head, as everyone around looked on, speechless.

Then he leapt out to bite the screaming doctor’s hand.

On
three other flights headed for New York, London and Washington, the men
who had accompanied Nadir to the camp in Afghanistan similarly
transformed as the Sun set.

David
Bremsak knew nothing of this, sleeping his first full night’s sleep in
close to a month. His bunk at Camp Delta just outside the town of Gardez
was hardly luxurious, but it beat humping up and down the Shahikot
Mountains wondering if he was in some Taliban sniper’s sights. He was
dreaming of Rose, her long, blond hair, her smell, her touch, when he
was woken up. He looked up to see Dan, his M82 in hand.

‘Captain, sorry to wake you up.’

David looked as if he was ready to murder Dan.

‘This better be good.’

Dan reached over and handed over David’s M4 and vest.

‘We’re under attack.’

That
got David’s attention, and he grabbed his gear and rushed out of his
cabin. Mike had also just come out of his cabin next door, wearing a
Kevlar vest over his t-shirt, carrying an M4 as well. The CIA officer
shouted out at David as he saw him.

‘The Taliban must have gone nuts. Trying to attack us here is suicide!’

There
were soldiers milling around everywhere. The members of the small TF121
detachment were `guests’ here, sharing the base with its usual
occupants, an Army Ranger unit. Given the secretive nature of their HVT
hunts, and the time they spent outside in the mountains, David and his
men had never really got to know the Rangers too well. But now David saw
their Commanding Officer, Major James Lafferty, roaring orders to his
men.

‘You there, reinforce the western side! I want snipers covering every angle.’

David jogged over to him. Compared to the lean, wiry SEAL, the Ranger Major looked like a giant pitbull.

‘What’s up?’

‘Two of my boys are down. Some Taliban must have sneaked in and attacked our sentries.’

David
considered that for a minute. He had been fast asleep but there was no
way he could have slept through gunfire. James must have read his mind.

‘They bit them. We never picked them up till they were too close.’

David took in the bizarre details.

‘Did we get them?’

James looked down straight at his eyes, and David thought that he saw fear in the giant man’s eyes.

‘The boys pumped them full of bullets, but get this, the two of them fell down, then got back up and ran away.’

‘All clear!’

The
Ranger who had shouted sounded scared, and David could sense that as
word of the raid got around, everyone was spooked. It was one thing to
deal with an enemy who shot at you, and reassuringly stayed dead when
you shot back. What did you do with enemies who bit you and then got
back up when you shot them? He saw Mike a few feet away. The CIA officer
had seen his share of crazy stuff, but this was something too weird
even for him. The Rangers were now busy tending to the two wounded men,
who were bleeding profusely from bites to their hands and necks.

‘Get them Medevaced now!’

The
next morning, they were airlifted to Kabul and then were on a flight to
Ramstein airbase in Germany, when doctors at the base in Kabul said
they just could not deal with the strange symptoms they were seeing.
When the flights landed, horrified medics found everyone on board bit
and scratched by their patients.

David
and his team were out on the road again. He had heard that he was being
recommended for a Navy Cross for the mission that had taken out Mullah
Omar and Al-Zawahiri. Medals were always nice, but the biggest thing on
his mind was the fact that he was finally doing something that mattered.
His father, a New York firefighter, had perished in the rubble of the
World Trade Center, and David had dedicated every single moment of his
life since that day to avenging his father, and the thousands of others
who had died on 9/11. He didn’t look like much a warrior, standing five
feet eight, and with a lean body, but what he lacked in size, he more
than made up in determination and speed. He had hung in there when
stronger and more experienced men had quit all around him at SEAL
training in Coronado, and then he had taken his revenge in missions
around the world- from Iraq to Afghanistan.

Mike was right by his side.

‘Do you reckon there’s any truth to this at all?’

‘Mike,
I’ve seen all kinds of terrorists and tough guys. They all like to talk
it up but believe me, when you shoot them, they all stay down. Our boys
must have been just panicked. Most of them are just kids on their first
combat tour. I bet they never even hit those Taliban once.’

Rumours
had been spreading like wildfire all over Afghanistan. Tales of
black-turbaned Taliban who had come back from the dead, and who could
not be killed. Monsters who had superhuman strength and speed, and were
rampaging through whole villages at night, biting and scratching people
and then disappearing into the mountains. David and his team were to
check out the last reported sighting. Their brief was simple. Find out
if these mythical `undead’ Taliban existed, and if they did, then to
shoot a few of them dead to prove to the Afghan people that they were
just a figment of someone’s imagination, or as David suspected, the
Taliban propaganda machine in overdrive.

They
were an hour into their hike through the hills when Rob spotted some
movement behind them in the dark. David turned around to see a black
turbaned man standing on a small hillock just fifty feet behind them.

How the hell had anyone got on their tail without their noticing it?

David
brought his M4’s scope to his eyes. With his night vision optics on,
what he saw was bathed in a ghostly green light. Their stalker had a
black turban tied around his head in the fashion the Taliban favoured,
but the rest of him scarcely looked human. Despite the cold, he was
wearing tattered clothes, revealing a body covered in boils, pus and
blood. His skin was a sickly yellow and his mouth was open, revealing
teeth with jagged, sharp edges.

‘Dan, drop the bastard!’

Dan
brought up his M82 to his shoulder but even before he could take aim,
the man had disappeared from sight, moving faster than David had seen
any man move. Just then Rob screamed, an ugly, keening sound. David
turned to see him on the ground, a black-turbaned man on his chest,
leaning over and biting his shoulders and chest. David’s M4 was up in a
flash and he fired a three round burst into the man. The shots sent the
man sprawling against the rock face, but then to David’s horror, the man
got up. Close up, he looked even more horrible than the other man David
had seen through his scope. He smelt like a cross between a dead mouse
and a toilet that has not been flushed or cleaned for some time. His
eyes were focused on David, and his lips were pursed back, revealing the
sharp, blood-covered teeth.

Then,
he leapt at Mike with surprising speed and bit him in the arm. The CIA
officer had his handgun out and fired three 9MM rounds at point blank
range even as the man’s teeth sank into his left hand. The black
turbaned man fell to the ground, and then seemingly jumped off the edge.
David peered over to see him climbing down the sheer rock face. He then
saw the two wounded men on the ground, blood oozing from their wounds.
David had never been a particularly religious man, but he crossed
himself, shuddering at the horror of what he had just seen with his own
eyes.
***

 

A Guest Post for Fans of Paul Levine’s Bestselling “JAKE LASSITER” Mysteries: NOW, THE BACKSTORY!

 
HOW A WINDSURFING INJURY LED TO THE WRITING OF RIPTIDE
By Paul Levine


by Paul Levine
5.0 stars – 3 Reviews
 

If not for an injury, I never would have become a novelist.

This is the backstory of “Riptide.”

In
1986, I rented a condo on Maui for the summer, intent on polishing my
skills as a competitive windsurfer.  Strong trade winds, gorgeous waves
for jumping, and warm water.  What could go wrong?


My
second day at Hookipa Beach, bouncing over the lip of a roller, the
board exploded out of the water and smashed my femur.  The E.R.
physician told me nothing was broken and recommended smoking a little
Maui Wowie for the pain.  (No, it was not Dr. House).  


No
more windsurfing, so I sat on the beach with a yellow pad and, without
knowing what I
was doing, started handwriting a novel featuring a
character that popped into my mind:  linebacker-turned-lawyer Jake
Lassiter.  Here’s the first sentence of fiction I ever wrote, (not
counting certain statements in my appellate briefs).  “The old man loved
gadgets, money, and large-breasted women, and at the moment, he had all
three.” 


When I returned home to Miami, I put the novel aside and wrote “To Speak for the Dead,”
which became my first published book.  I kept re-writing “Riptide,”
which appeared as a William Morrow hardcover under the title
“Slashback.”  And that line about gadgets, money, and breasts?  It’s now
the first sentence of chapter two.  Here’s what the Tampa Tribune had
to say:


“A thriller as fast as the wind…a bracing rush, as breathtaking as hitting the Gulf waters on a chill December morning.

“Riptide”
is the only one of the Lassiter thrillers based on one of my cases.
 Yes, I really had an octogenarian client who kept $2 million in
negotiable bonds in a desk drawer.  And yes, his secretary, a woman
“somewhere between forty and hell,” ripped him off.  Though I was a
lawyer, I really acted as a P.I., tracking down the bonds without
killing anyone or getting shot at myself.   Is Jake Lassiter as lucky in
“Riptide?”  Aw, it’ll cost you $2.99 to find out.  


All
I’ll say now is that the trail of clues leads to a sinister
professional windsurfer and his companion, Lila Summers, a champion
athlete and a lethal femme fatale.  Jake chases the missing bonds and
the mysterious woman from Miami to Bimini to Maui where, in an explosive
finale, he learns lessons never taught on the football field or in the
courtroom.


There’s more about the Jake Lassiter series on my website, including info about “Riptide,” and of course you can buy the e-book from Amazon Kindle.

           

KND Kindle Free Book Alert, Monday, August 8: SEVENTY-FIVE (75) BRAND NEW FREEBIES IN THE PAST 4 DAYS! Search OVER 925 FREE TITLES by Category! plus … Think “Nancy Drew goes Goth, meets Glee!” and you’ve got E.J. Stevens’ smart and snappy SHE SMELLS THE DEAD (Today’s Sponsor, $2.99)

Our magical free book tool has been suffering from the hiccups over the weekend, so we have a special treat to make up for any inconvenience: 75 new freebies hand-delivered to you the old-fashioned way! 

 

But first, a word from … Today’s Sponsor
 

“If you love ghosts, Goths, and a little bit of YA romance, you will want to check this book out.”



–Yvonne, Diva’s Bookcase

 

 

She Smells the Dead (Spirit Guide) 

by E.J. Stevens

4.5 on 38 out of 40 Rave Reviews!

Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Don’t have a Kindle? Get yours here.
 

 

 

“This series is like Nancy Drew meets the Winchester Brothers from Supernatural.”
–Natalie, I’d So Rather Be Reading

 

 

Here’s the set-up:

 

It’s the beginning of senior year and Yuki’s psychic awareness of ghostly spirits is threatening to ruin her life. Her ability to sense spirits of the dead isn’t glamorous like the ghost hunting on television. 

The smell impressions are becoming stronger. Yuki is being visited in her dreams, and she suspects that her friend Calvin is involved in something strange. To make matters worse her crush on Garrett is going unrequited, Yuki’s friend Emma is on a rampage against bee oppression, and annoying Calvin Miller mysteriously disappears. Will Yuki be able to focus her powers in time to save the lost soul who is haunting her? Meanwhile, who will save Yuki from following the spirits into the light?

 

 

 

 

One Reviewer Notes: 

 

 

“She Smells the Dead is a quick read with very short chapters that hold the reader’s attention. It’ll probably appeal the most to YA readers who are a little non-mainstream themselves, because Yuki and Calvin aren’t antisocial, but they’re not All-American types, either. Yuki is smart and interesting, but she’s teased mercilessly by the jocks and cheerleaders at her school who can’t get over simple things like the fact that she wears all-black clothes and belongs to the anime club. I was really pleased, though, by the fact that Yuki has a loving mother, so between her nice mom and the support of her friends, Yuki’s not too bad off, despite the prejudices of the popular kids. Check out this book if you’re looking for a neat, unique heroine and some weird and wonderful paranormal elements.  

–Tiger Holland, Top 1000 Reviewer

 

 

 

About the Author 

E.J. Stevens writes poetry and young adult paranormal novels. E.J. is author of the haunting collection of dark poetry From the Shadows, the chilling collection of paranormal poetry Shadows of Myth and Legend, and the young adult paranormal Spirit Guide Series, including She Smells the Dead, Spirit Storm, and Legend of Witchtrot Road.

When E.J. isn’t at her writing desk she can be found blogging at From the Shadows, a paranormal book blog, or hanging out on Goodreads or Twitter.

E.J. is a graduate of the University of Maine at Farmington with a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology and is an active member of the Paranormal Romance Guild. E.J. currently resides in a magical forest on the coast of Maine where she finds daily inspiration for her writing. Visit E.J. at:

E.J.’s About Me Page: http://about.me/EJStevens

From the Shadows (blog): http://www.FromTheShadows.info

Official Spirit Guide Series website: http://spiritguideseries.blogspot.com

Author page (with tour info): http://ejstevensbooks.blogspot.com

Follow E.J. Stevens on twitter: http://twitter.com/EJStevensAuthor

 

Click hereto download She Smells the Dead (Spirit Guide) (or a free sample) to your Kindle, iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, BlackBerry, Android-compatible, PC or Mac and start reading within 60 seconds!
 

 

 

UK CUSTOMERS: Click on the title below to download

 

Each day’s list is sponsored by one paid title. We encourage you to support our sponsors and thank you for considering them.

Authors and Publishers: Interested in learning more about sponsorship? Just click on this link for more information.

Free Contemporary Titles in the Kindle Store

Welcome to Kindle Nation’s magical and revolutionary Free Book Search Tool — automatically updated and refreshed in real time, now with Category Search! Use the drop-down menu (in red caps next to the menu bar near the top of the page) to search for free Kindle books by genre or category, then sort the list just the way you want it — by date added, bestselling, or review rating! But there’s no need to sort by price — because they’re all free!

Please note: Our free book tool has had some uncharacteristic updating problems in the past few days, and we are working on it. But please do make a point of always taking a quick look at the Kindle Store price before you click to download any Kindle book, and you may want to double-check to make sure that you were not charged by Amazon for any of the books that were listed as free here. And remember that you can return any Kindle book for a full refund within seven days with no questions asked — just go to the Contact page for Kindle Support and request a refund by email, phone, or chat.

Meanwhile, here are the 75 MOST RECENTLY ADDED FREE LISTINGS in the Kindle Store:

The Secrets of the German War Office - World War I
By: Dr. Armgaard Karl Graves
Added: 08/08/2011 4:05:03am
Migrations, Volume I : Don't Forget to Breathe
By: Ashim Shanker
Added: 08/08/2011 3:06:12am
Free To Die: A Short Story
By: John Brinling
Added: 08/08/2011 3:05:55am
Sons and Princes
By: James Lepore
Added: 08/08/2011 1:05:58am
The Beautiful G.A.G.A
By: German Alcala
Added: 08/07/2011 11:05:44pm
Memoirs of a Snowflake
By: Joe Vasicek
Added: 08/07/2011 10:05:23pm
FIRE FELL FROM HEAVEN
By: E. Don Harpe
Added: 08/07/2011 10:05:14pm
Passages
By: Emily Ward
Added: 08/07/2011 5:05:35pm
Special Delivery
By: Lia Fairchild
Added: 08/07/2011 4:05:23pm
Adam's Bar-B-Que Ribs
By: Sugar Lee Ryder
Added: 08/07/2011 11:05:22am
Smallworld
By: Dominic Green
Added: 08/07/2011 7:05:11am
Cougar Cub Tales: Lost and Alone
By: Sharon Cramer
Added: 08/07/2011 6:05:31am
Mug Shot
By: Edward Winslow
Added: 08/07/2011 4:06:40am
One More Winter: A Short Story
By: Rebecca K. O’Connor
Added: 08/07/2011 4:06:29am
Legend of the Tiger's Throne
By: Ian Alexander
Added: 08/07/2011 2:05:23am
Lucky Leprecock (City Girl Series)
By: C. J. Starr
Added: 08/07/2011 2:05:07am
Mighty Chief Chappose Picks Berries (Sketches from the Spanish Mustang)
By: Benjamin X. Wretlind
Added: 08/06/2011 6:05:48pm
On the Run (The Gregory Series - Book 1)
By: Sue Fineman
Added: 08/06/2011 6:05:35pm
The Kidnapping of Billy Buttons
By: R.G. Crossley
Added: 08/06/2011 5:05:28pm
Future Speculation (a science fiction short story from Greyhart Press)
By: Tim C. Taylor
Added: 08/06/2011 5:05:23pm
Hawks Mountain
By: Elizabeth Sinclair
Added: 08/06/2011 5:05:04pm
stories in between: narratives and mediums @ play
By: Drew Davidson
Added: 08/06/2011 4:05:45pm
The Turtle Boy (The Timmy Quinn Series)
By: Kealan Patrick Burke
Added: 08/06/2011 4:05:36pm
The Stone of Cuore (The Third Age of Timare)
By: Stephen I. Carmer
Added: 08/06/2011 4:05:30pm
1 Law (with Special Excerpt Content)
By: Keith Latch
Added: 08/06/2011 3:05:17pm
The Anger Diet: Thirty Days to Stress-Free Living
By: Brenda Shoshanna Ph.D.
Added: 08/06/2011 3:05:06pm
Birds in Paradise (Includes Sneak Preview of Flowerbed of State)
By: Dorothy St. James
Added: 08/06/2011 12:05:22pm
The Days and Months We Were First Born- The Unraveling (Book 1 of 3)
By: Christopher Hunter
Added: 08/06/2011 5:05:12am
The World of Lady Lazarus
By: Michele Lang
Added: 08/06/2011 4:05:32am
A Secret Life (Book 1 of The Lord Hawkesbury's Players series)
By: C.J. Archer
Added: 08/06/2011 4:05:20am
Copy Bird
By: B.C. Young
Added: 08/06/2011 3:05:27am
Thomas & the Christmas Orange: Storybook Advent Calendar Singles
By: Lewis Brech
Added: 08/05/2011 5:05:28pm
Writing Critique: A Horror Short Story
By: Rebecca M. Senese
Added: 08/05/2011 5:05:24pm
Road Markers
By: Jason McIntyre
Added: 08/05/2011 5:05:19pm
A Good Clean, A Harsh Clean
By: Brian Martinez
Added: 08/05/2011 5:05:16pm
The Labyrinth
By: Kenneth McDonald
Added: 08/05/2011 5:05:11pm
The Ghost Of A Flea
By: John Brinling
Added: 08/05/2011 5:05:04pm
Chernobyl
By: Eric Wilder
Added: 08/05/2011 4:05:42pm
HUNT FOR THE CHUPACABRA (a Chupacabra Series short story)
By: Michael Hebler
Added: 08/05/2011 4:05:38pm
Lethal Force
By: Matt Lynn
Added: 08/05/2011 4:05:32pm
Clarity (Soul Mates Series)
By: Jourdan Lane
Added: 08/05/2011 4:05:28pm
The Rhine Maiden
By: Erin Evans
Added: 08/05/2011 4:05:21pm
Equinox: Six Declinations
By: Richard Freeland
Added: 08/05/2011 11:04:59am
Stormfront
By: M.C.A. Hogarth
Added: 08/05/2011 7:05:21am
2011 Economic Report of the President
By: Council of Economic Advisers
Added: 08/05/2011 6:07:03am
Bouvard and P?cuchet
By: Gustave Flaubert
Added: 08/05/2011 6:06:58am
The Easy Path
By: Steve Gerber
Added: 08/05/2011 6:06:55am
Expressions of Freedom
By: Gareth Lewis
Added: 08/05/2011 6:06:50am
Pulsing: A Short Story
By: Joshua Scribner
Added: 08/05/2011 6:06:45am
Spin the Plate Short Story
By: Donna Anastasi
Added: 08/05/2011 6:06:40am
Completing the Cycle (Short Story)
By: Mike Lewis
Added: 08/05/2011 6:06:36am
Fight Now: Eat & Live Proactively Against Breast Cancer
By: Aaron Tabor MD
Added: 08/05/2011 6:06:32am
Jailbreak
By: Steven W. Booth
Added: 08/05/2011 6:06:28am
Surviving the Fog
By: Stan Morris
Added: 08/05/2011 6:06:24am
Project Daedalus
By: Thomas Hoover
Added: 08/05/2011 6:06:19am
Witches 101: A Witches of East End Primer
By: Melissa de la Cruz
Added: 08/05/2011 6:06:13am
Fluffs
By: Daniel I. Russell
Added: 08/05/2011 6:06:04am
Stick It To The Man
By: Ronald Lewis
Added: 08/05/2011 6:05:57am

Kindle Nation Bargain Book Alert! Bestselling Kindle suspense author Mike Jastrzebski gives 5 stars to John M. Urban’s collection URBAN SHORTS – modern-day stories of mystery, suspense, and crime. It’s our Kindle eBook of the Day at just 99 cents!

Here’s the set-up for John Urban’s Urban Shorts, just 99 Cents on Kindle:

Urban Shorts – modern-day stories of mystery, suspense, and crime.
Mystery writer John Urban provides four short stories plus an opening excerpt from his soon to be released mystery novel. The 20,500 word e-book includes:
  • “Junior Jameson” — Extreme wealth, corporate excess, and a crime that takes the reader from New York to Antigua and back.
  • “Courtesy Call” — A locally grown police officer patrols his home community on what was to be a quiet summer evening.
  • “The Association” — Retirement life in Stuart-by-the-Sea is quiet and dull. Or at least it was until now.
  • “Halfway Rock” — Urban’s protagonist, Steve Decatur, sets out in a water-borne chase on the stormy waters of Buzzards Bay.
  • “Devil’s Bridge” — An opening except of a new Steve Decatur mystery involving modern day slave trafficking that draws historical echoes from the days of the early 1800s when ships from Newport and Bristol, Rhode Island sailed the Triangle Trade.
From a reviewer:

I don’t usually read short stories but since I enjoyed Urban’s novel, A Single Deadly Truth, I decided to give his Urban shorts a try. I found all four of the stories varied and interesting and I have to say I enjoyed reading them. This doesn’t mean that I’m going on a short story reading frenzy anytime soon, but if John comes out with another story collection in the future I’ll probably pick them up. Besides, how can you beat four stories for 99 cents. — Mike Jastrzebski, author of The Storm Killer and Key Lime Blues.

Like his protagonist, John Urban has worked as a college professor and he sails the waters of Southern New England on an old wooden sailboat that he restored. He is a regular contributor to the blog Write On The Water, and his short stories have appeared in the anthologies Seasmoke and Deadfall.
The ocean was his desired destination from an early age. As a boy living a landlocked life in Western Massachusetts, nights were dedicated to reading about boats and watching Flipper and weekends were spent boating and fishing, April-to-October, on Long Island Sound.
Thoughts of a career at sea ended early after a stint at the Massachusetts Maritime Academy, but the circle of life has come around some years later in the form of the fictional world of Steve Decatur. Urban lives just outside Boston and spends his summers near the waters edge of Buzzards Bay and Rhode Island Sound. A Single Deadly Truth, published on Amazon Kindle, is Urban’s debut novel. As second Steve Decatur mystery is due out in 2011.

For more information: www.johnmurban.com

And here, in the comfort of your own browser, is your free sample:


KND Kindle Free Book Alert, Sunday, August 7: Search 925 FREE TITLES by Category, including 90 FREEBIES FOR KIDS! plus … J. A. Paul’s GLADIUS AND THE BARTLETT TRIAL (Today’s Sponsor, $0.99)

                                

When you’re at the wheel of our magical Kindle free book tool, you’re always just a click away from a new destination, since you can search all the freebies in any category from Kids and Young Adult to Cooking, Food and Wine….

But first, a word from … Today’s Sponsor

Can Gladius and friends solve the riddle of the ancient secret before the evil Mulhurt does? If they can, will they be able to do anything about it? Find out for only 99 cents!

Gladius and the Bartlett Trial
by J. A. Paul
4.6 Stars on 16 Straight Rave Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled 
Don’t have a Kindle? Get yours here.

“This book is perfect for all age readers — adventure, mystery, intrigue, suspense — yet no sex or inappropriate language!

–Bonnie



Here’s the set-up: 
 

When fifteen year-old Gladius Oldmont is thrust from his peaceful home into the dangerous Longwood Forest he finds himself pitted against a tyrant who has been terrorizing the lands in search of answers to an ancient secret that could unlock absolute power.

From the shadows of Longwood Forest to the Hills of the Moon, Gladius must survive encounters with a near extinct scimitar cat, an ornery dragon, a horde of death bats and a tumultuous underground river which leads to a subterranean labyrinth of tunnels. Along the way, he makes new acquaintances and discovers the true meaning of friendship, including Elle – a girl who captivates his heart.


One Reviewer Notes:


“This was an adventurous, fast-paced story aimed for tweens and up. Gladius starts on a simple quest and ends up taking up a much bigger one shortly after meeting Flint. It will prove to be the challenge of his life as he’s up against large cats, dragons, and bats controlled by an evil tyrant bent on destroying whatever is necessary to gain absolute power over all. Fortunately, Gladius will make some friends to help him survive it all, and maybe come back with more than he could have hoped for to make it all worthwhile.

–S. J. Wist


About the Author

I started writing short stories ten years ago. Then one day someone told me to choose three things and write a story around that. I chose a dragon, a tree and a ruby. From the seed of that idea, the story of Gladius grew. When I started writing I wanted to create a fantasy adventure novel for my three sons. I also wanted to show them that if you set your mind to something that it can be done. My boys are proud of my first novel I hope to continue writing for a long time to come. Book II of the Gladius series is already under way!
For more information visit http://www.authorjapaul.com/

Click hereto download Gladius and the Bartlett Trial (or a free sample) to your Kindle, iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, BlackBerry, Android-compatible, PC or Mac and start reading within 60 seconds!

UK CUSTOMERS: Click on the title below to download
Each day’s list is sponsored by one paid title. We encourage you to support our sponsors and thank you for considering them.

Authors and Publishers: Interested in learning more about sponsorship? Just click on this link for more information.

Free Contemporary Titles in the Kindle Store 

Welcome to Kindle Nation’s magical and revolutionary Free Book Search Tool — automatically updated and refreshed in real time, now with Category Search! Use the drop-down menu (in red caps next to the menu bar near the top of the page) to search for free Kindle books by genre or category, then sort the list just the way you want it — by date added, bestselling,, or review rating! But there’s no need to sort by price — because they’re all free!

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FRIENDSHIP BRACELETS SIMPLIFIEDBest of Friendship Bracelets Making Guide with Several DIY Pictorial ProjectsThere are a lot of friendships bracelets select from thiH./s time of the year. In this book I’m going to show you some other easy project for showing off your crew colors on Good luck...
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Curious about the time-capsule of secrets that had been buried at Pompeii? The initials of 'SC' in its various forms was found all over the artifacts and architecture of Pompeii, Italy--which was buried under volcanic pumice for almost two thousand years. The 'SC' was a secret. There is a...
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Beth Swanson is a pampered young lady who longs for independence but not too much of it... As she eagerly awaits her birthday, everything she knows is turned upside down when she overhears her parents’ conversation.The secret is too terrible to handle and with her life in tatters, it is now her...
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Discover the remarkable history of the Crimean War... Free BONUS Inside! The Crimean War was one of the bloodiest conflicts of the nineteenth century, but it is also one of the least remembered. More men died in the Crimean War than in the American Civil War which followed soon after, but while the...
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Do you enjoy eating cookies? Do you feel a party table is incomplete without some beautiful cookies? Do you enjoy cookies that you snack on them now and then? Do you want to bake cookies yourself at home but feel it is difficult to make them?Then worry no more because you will find 30 delicious...
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Human beings are abundant. Yet for every person on Earth, countless insects thrive, chewing through the roots and underpinnings of nature. This year, it will be a very good year for bugs!An ocean of insecticide cannot suppress their demonic hordes. They could easily dominate the planet. Why not?...
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MACRAME FOR BEGINNERSUltimate Pictorial DIY Project Guide to Macramé Knots & Patterns, Plant Holder, Christmas Wall Hanging, Plant Hanger, Bags, Bracelets EtcMacramé is a form of fabric produced with the use of different knotting techniques instead of weaving or knitting strategies.It became long...
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Everyone shines in their own special way.Dawn the comb jelly is in first grade with her friends. Dawn likes school and loves her teacher. But no matterhow much she tries, she doesn't flash as bright as the other jellies.Everyone picks on Dawn and even her best friend laughs at her. It makes Dawn...
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Dawn the comb jelly
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Cases of missing people that defy explanation! Some missing person cases are more bizarre and mysterious than others. This book reports such cases. Download FREE with Kindle Unlimited We often tend to think that we can easily find the explanation to everything around us, yet there are so many...
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Kindle Nation Bargain Book Alert! You’ll fall in love with the regulars who frequent the Hideaway Bar and Barbecue in Indian Creek, Texas, in our Kindle eBook of the Day: Jade Pittman’s DEADLY SECRETS – 5 stars and just $2.99 on Kindle!

Here’s the set-up for Jude Pittman’s Deadly Secrets, just $2.99 on Kindle:

Kelly McWinter is a former Fort Worth police officer who suffered a personal tragedy that caused him to quit the force and isolate himself in the community of Indian Creek, Texas. Kelly is the Clint Eastwood, John Wayne type of man who makes everyone feel safe. The characters at Indian Creek are so unique and eccentric that readers and reviewers alike have fallen in love with the regulars who frequent Cam Belcher’s Hideaway Bar and Barbecue.
Tammy from Fallen Angel reviews described the Indian Creek Texas mysteries as “A fabulous mixture of Texas humor, heart-pounding action, sexy nuances and mounting suspense.
There’s plenty of excitement, plenty of intrigue, a local flavor to tickle the toughest of taste buds and a good serving of hot, steamy romance to titillate the senses.”
From the Author:

Deadly Secrets was such a fun book to write. I fell in love with the regulars at the Hideaway Bar and Barbecue and Kelly McWinter is every woman’s hero. Tall and dark and ruggedly handsome with a gentle manner and a determination to know the truth, he’s solid gold.
From a reviewer:

I read Deadly Secrets in one afternoon because I couldn’t put it down. Once I got hooked in by the cast of characters in Indian Creek, Texas, I had to keep reading! Just got the second book, Deadly Betrayal, and am ready to start it. Love Kelly the hero and his great dog Jake! Highly recommend Deadly Secrets to anyone who enjoys a good mystery with a spark of romance. This one is on my keeper shelf. – Jamie I. Hill
Over the past 20 years, Jude has published a mixture of freelance articles, features, short stories and corporate histories. But, her passion has always been for the shadowy secrets unveiled in the mystery novel.
DEADLY SECRETS AND DEADLY BETRAYAL, the first two novels in Jude’ s Indian Creek Texas Mysteries series, were the realization of a lifelong dream.
And here, in the comfort of your own browser, is your free sample: