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It’s 2110, and the most brilliant minds agree the government has a right to know who you are, where you are and what you are doing. 1984? Anthem? Blade Runner? No, it’s our eBook of the Day: Simon Royle’s TAG, and here’s a free sample

From a world where personal privacy has been forsaken comes a tale of conspiracy, love and murder – and the bond shared by brothers.

Here’s the set-up for Simon Royle’s dystopian thriller TAG:

In the wake of Arbitrator Jonah Oliver’s interrogation of Jibril Muraz, a prisoner of UNPOL, his secure life disintegrates into one of lies, corruption, conspiracy and murder due to what he learns.
Jonah is thrown into a race against the clock to stop a plot designed to eliminate two-thirds of the population. The odds are stacked against him. He soon finds his past is not what he thought it was, those closest to him cannot be trusted, and what he’s learned could get him, or worse, his loved ones, killed.
On 15 March 2110, 6.3 billion people will die at the hand of one man.
A man with a twisted vision, to make humans a better, more intelligent race.
From a world where personal privacy has been forsaken comes a tale of conspiracy, love and murder – and the bond shared by brothers.

About the Author: 

Simon Royle was born in Manchester, England in 1963. He has been variously a yachtsman, advertising executive, and a senior management executive in software companies. 

A futurist and a technologist, he lives in Bangkok, with his wife and two children. TAG is his first novel.

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


Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert, Monday, January 24: A “Sweet Seven” Bundle of Brand New Kindle Freebies! plus … Travel with us to 2110 for a big sweeping story told with a master’s touch in TAG by Simon Royle (Today’s Sponsor)

Psst. Over here! Please keep this on the low, but we know that Kindle Nation readers cannot live by business, leadership, and marketing titles alone, so we’ve surreptitiously slipped a brand new free contemporary romance to the top of today’s freshly updated presentation of more than 200 Free Book Alert listings….

But first, a word from … Today’s Sponsor
Simon Royle delivers a big, sweeping story with mastery, taking us to a 2110 world where vacuum-tube trains make it from London to New York in 35 minutes and the compelling characters engage us in a timeless story of love, murder and conspiracy … all wrapped around brotherly love…

Tag has an excellent plot that would translate well to the big screen.
An impressive debut. Highly recommended.”
–Vicki Tyley for LitFest Magazine


TAG
(The Zumar Chronicles)
by Simon Royle
4.7 out of 5 stars 6 Reviews
Text-to-Speech: Enabled
Don’t have a Kindle? Get yours here.

Enthralling reading
A compelling read!
Nice fast paced read with a twist or two



Here’s the set-up…

On 15 March 2110, 6.3 billion people will die.

One man’s vision to make the world a better place.

From a world where the concept of violence has changed, and where personal privacy has been forsaken, comes a tale of conspiracy, love and murder – and the bond shared by brothers.


What the Reviewers Say
Imagine a future where privacy is almost non-existent. A future where even your thoughts aren’t safe. It’s the year 2109 and every citizen is required by law “to carry upon their person an electronic device containing the means to broadcast their Personal Unique Identifier (PUI), and authorizes the monitoring of the identity, location, movements and actions of any citizen, without prior cause warranting such monitoring, by satellite or any other means…” But then a new “tag law” is proposed, one where the only difference between it and the old law is that the PUI is to be embedded in the arm.

In a race against time, UNPOL (United Nation Police) arbitrator Jonah Oliver is on a mission to save the lives of 6.3 billion people.

This fast-paced technothriller paints a scenario so plausible, it’s actually quite terrifying. Though action-packed, the relationship between Jonah and Mariko adds quieter moments and balance to this big, multi-dimensional story. The sense of place and time is vivid, yet there are no wasted words.

Tag has an excellent plot that would translate well to the big screen.

An impressive debut. Highly recommended.
–Vicki Tyley for LitFest Magazine


I don’t want to give away any spoilers because the plot is detailed and there’s lots of little hooks that at the time you don’t realize what they are until they reveal themselves later. But I can say that the plot is a big one – a conspiracy to kill of two-thirds of the population which in a hundred years from now (when the story takes place) is 9 billion people.

Although the author has labeled the book science fiction it really isn’t science fiction, just our world one hundred years further on. I really liked his ideas about technology, (he describes how trains could run in vacuum tubes and take us from London to New York in 35 minutes – I thought that was far-fetched but checked it out on the web and it is possible) how the world operates and how society has changed.


The characters are interesting and each is well filled out with enough detail to give you a strong sense of who they are, and why they are doing the things they do. I don’t normally review books because I don’t think I’m that good at it but I wanted to give the author a pat on the back for doing a good job. Glad I picked this one up, the story moves along at a fast pace, flows nicely, and is a real page turner. This is a book you can sink your teeth into.

–Pete Northrop


Life is irrevocably changed for Arbitrator Jonah Oliver the day he’s called in to work with a mysterious runner, Jibril Muraz, who seems to have no past, and an amazing ability to avoid the potency of the truth treatment. Jonah is not sure why this strange and alien being is asking specifically for Jonah’s services, and things become even less clear when a telepathic message is received directly from Jibril that hints at secrets and betrayal. With little explanation, and much confusion, Jonah is thrown into a race against the clock to stop a terrible plot designed to eliminate two-thirds of the population. All the odds are stacked against him, and he soon finds that his past is not what he thought it was, and his future is even more uncertain.

In his first novel, Simon Royle has managed to create a riveting thriller that kept me up much past my bedtime. From the first chapter, I was engaged and eager to discover the secrets of Jonah’s life as they unfolded. The book is set a century in the future, and the world looks much as we may expect; it is different, but somehow exactly the same. In line with the human tendency to shorten words of common objects (think net for internet, phone for telephone, TV for television), some of the important terms of this century include, amongst other terms, dev (device), trav (travel), and cred (credit- monetary units earned by “contributions”). Although common travel has extended to the moon and the world is now united, at least in theory, the people and the experiences are recognizable and definitely feasible. The idea of “tagging” humans with their identity numbers is perhaps not even as far in the future as the timeline chosen for this book. This fictional reality is extremely realistic, and the implications of such a future really demand to be considered.

The characters in this book were interesting and decently developed for a thriller. I may have enjoyed some additional development when it came to some of the relationships, particularly between Jonah and Mariko, to really understand their connections. In a fast-paced storyline like this, however, it really is more secondary to the action, and the action was well done. The writing style was very engaging and readable. I really didn’t find myself rewriting any passages in my head, and that’s always a good thing! The plot was well-paced, and it really compelled me to read the whole way through, especially as I began the last half of the book. The book switches from first person (when Jonah is present) to third person (when we’re with everyone else), and it made me do a quick double take once in a while, but that is probably my fault, as I have a tendency not to read chapter headings, and that is where the time, place, and characters were clearly spelled out.
GraceKrispy, Reviewer


About the Author

Simon Royle was born in Manchester, England in 1963. He has been variously a yachtsman, advertising executive, and a senior management executive in software companies. A futurist and a technologist, he lives in Bangkok, with his wife and two children. TAG is his first novel.


Click here to download Tag (The Zumar Chronicles) (or a free sample) to your Kindle, iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, BlackBerry, Android-compatible, PC or Mac and start reading within 60 seconds!

Each day’s list is sponsored by one paid title. We encourage you to support our sponsors and thank you for considering them.
Authors, Publishers, iPad Accessory Manufacturers:
Interested in learning more about sponsorship? Just click on this link for more information.

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Goodness Gracious Green
By: Judy Christie
Added: 01/24/2011 3:01:02am

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert, Tuesday, December 28: Phenomenal Girl 5? International Intrigue with Noel Hynd? Take Your Pick! plus … a novel like no novel I have ever read: “On 15 March 2110, 6.3 billion people will die” in TAG by Simon Royle (Today’s Sponsor)

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There will be reviewers who will call it science fiction. I don’t think so.

Let me put it to you this way: Was 1984 science fiction? Or John Hersey’s Hiroshima? Or Nevil Shute’s On the Beach?
Not precisely, right?
But there’s something else, too. Simon Royle has a bit of Ken Follett in him, in his capacity to concoct, and deliver on, a big sweeping story. Anyone with a five-dollar intellect can lay out a big story, but it takes mastery to tell it well. When you find yourself on — of all places! — a 2110 golf course with the main characters in Simon Royle’s narrative, totally engrossed in dialogue and story and possibility, and all of it managed with a relaxed hand, you know you are just where you want to be as a reader.

Lit Fest Magazine already imagines Tag on the big screen:
“Tag has an excellent plot that would translate well to the big screen.  An impressive debut. Highly recommended.”


TAG

by Simon Royle
5.0 out of 5 stars   4 Reviews

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

Here’s the set-up:
On 15 March 2110, 6.3 billion people will die.One man’s vision to make the world a better place.

From a world where the concept of violence has changed, and where personal privacy has been forsaken, comes a tale of conspiracy, love and murder – and the bond shared by brothers.

Why the reviewers all give TAG a 5.0 rating

“Having nothing to hide from each other is the first step to having nothing to fear from each other” – TagImagine a future where privacy is almost non-existent. A future where even your thoughts aren’t safe. It’s the year 2109 and every citizen is required by law “to carry upon their person an electronic device containing the means to broadcast their Personal Unique Identifier (PUI), and authorizes the monitoring of the identity, location, movements and actions of any citizen, without prior cause warranting such monitoring, by satellite or any other means…” But then a new “tag law” is proposed, one where the only difference between it and the old law is that the PUI is to be embedded in the arm.

In a race against time, UNPOL (United Nation Police) arbitrator Jonah Oliver is on a mission to save the lives of 6.3 billion people.

This fast-paced technothriller paints a scenario so plausible, it’s actually quite terrifying. Though action-packed, the relationship between Jonah and Mariko adds quieter moments and balance to this big, multi-dimensional story. The sense of place and time is vivid, yet there are no wasted words.

Tag has an excellent plot that would translate well to the big screen.

An impressive debut. Highly recommended.  —Vicki Tyley for Lit Fest Magazine
 

Life is irrevocably changed for Arbitrator Jonah Oliver the day he’s called in to work with a mysterious runner, Jibril Muraz, who seems to have no past, and an amazing ability to avoid the potency of the truth treatment. Jonah is not sure why this strange and alien being is asking specifically for Jonah’s services, and things become even less clear when a telepathic message is received directly from Jibril that hints at secrets and betrayal. With little explanation, and much confusion, Jonah is thrown into a race against the clock to stop a terrible plot designed to eliminate two-thirds of the population. All the odds are stacked against him, and he soon finds that his past is not what he thought it was, and his future is even more uncertain.In his first novel, Simon Royle has managed to create a riveting thriller that kept me up much past my bedtime. From the first chapter, I was engaged and eager to discover the secrets of Jonah’s life as they unfolded. The book is set a century in the future, and the world looks much as we may expect; it is different, but somehow exactly the same. In line with the human tendency to shorten words of common objects (think net for internet, phone for telephone, TV for television), some of the important terms of this century include, amongst other terms, dev (device), trav (travel), and cred (credit- monetary units earned by “contributions”). Although common travel has extended to the moon and the world is now united, at least in theory, the people and the experiences are recognizable and definitely feasible. The idea of “tagging” humans with their identity numbers is perhaps not even as far in the future as the timeline chosen for this book. This fictional reality is extremely realistic, and the implications of such a future really demand to be considered.

The characters in this book were interesting and decently developed for a thriller. I may have enjoyed some additional development when it came to some of the relationships, particularly between Jonah and Mariko, to really understand their connections. In a fast-paced storyline like this, however, it really is more secondary to the action, and the action was well done. The writing style was very engaging and readable. I really didn’t find myself rewriting any passages in my head, and that’s always a good thing! The plot was well-paced, and it really compelled me to read the whole way through, especially as I began the last half of the book. The book switches from first person (when Jonah is present) to third person (when we’re with everyone else), and it made me do a quick double take once in a while, but that is probably my fault, as I have a tendency not to read chapter headings, and that is where the time, place, and characters were clearly spelled out.–

GraceKrispy, Reviewer


About the Author
Simon Royle was born in Manchester, England in 1963. He has been variously a yachtsman, advertising executive, and a senior management executive in software companies. A futurist and a technologist, he lives in Bangkok, with his wife and two children. TAG is his first novel.

Click here to download Tag (The Zumar Chronicles) (or a free sample) to your Kindle, iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, BlackBerry, Android-compatible, PC or Mac and start reading within 60 seconds!
Each day’s list is sponsored by one paid title. We encourage you to support our sponsors and thank you for considering them.
Authors, Publishers, iPad Accessory Manufacturers:
Interested in learning more about sponsorship? Just click on this link for more information.
Free Contemporary Titles in the Kindle Store 
HOW TO USE OUR NEW FREE BOOK TOOL:

Just use the slider at right of your screen below to scroll through a complete, updated list of free contemporary Kindle titles, and click on an icon like this one (at right) to read a free sample right here in your browser! Titles are sorted in reverse chronological order so you can easily see new freebies.