Here’s what’s on my Kindle as of July 6, 2013.
Most of these titles — the ones that have a link to their Amazon page — I’d like to read and review. I’ve indicated with a “Reviewed” link the books I’ve already reviewed. Most are here on Honest Indie, but a few — the non-novels — are at Amazon. No link means the author has taken the book down. I’ve also indicated books I’ve read, but not reviewed.
As you can see, it’s a very long list, and growing. But getting through it is a labor of love.
On my Kindle
1. Adventures of Superhero Girl by Faith Erin Hicks
2. Aftereffects: Zombie Therapy by Zane Bradey ~ Reviewed
3. American Goddesses by Gary Henry (that’s me!)
4. Anabar’s Run by Will Granger
5. And the Stars Will Sing by Michelle Browne
6. The Art of War by Sunzi ~ Read
7. At Road’s End by Zoe Saadia
8. The B Team and Me by Chris James
9. The Beautiful and the Damned by F. Scott Fitzgerald
10. Bedtime Stories by Wendy Reid ~ Reviewed
11. The Black Witch by Micheal Rivers ~ Reviewed
12. Blood Bound by Sharon Stevenson
13. Bluewater Killer by Charles Dougherty ~ Reviewed
14. Bluewater Vengeance by Charles Dougherty
15. The Bones of Odin by David Leadbeater
16. The Bones of the Earth, Initiation Rites by Scott Bury ~ Reviewed
17. The Book of the Dead by E.A. Wallis Budge
18. The Briefcase by Lawrence Wray ~ Reviewed
19. Business as Usual by E.L. Lindley ~ Reviewed
20. The Butterfly and the Bull by Stuart Haddon
21. The Cahokian by Zoe Saadia
22. Cassidy Jones and the Secret Formula by Elise Stokes ~ Reviewed
23. Cassidy Jones and the Vulcan’s Gift by Elise Stokes
24. Castles: A fictional memoir of a girl with scissors by Benjamin X. Wretlind
25. Champion by Miles Cobbett
26. Characters in Search of a Novel by Molly D. Campbell
27. Charmeine by Emily Guido ~ Reviewed
28. Chasing Amanda by Melissa Foster ~ Reviewed
29. Chicks in Capes, by Nancy Holder
30. Class Action by Chris James ~ Reviewed
31. A Clear and Feathered Danger by Noah Murphy ~ Reviewed
32. Come back to me by Melissa Foster
33. Come the Shadows by Wendy L. Young ~ Reviewed
34. Convergent Space by John-Paul Cleary
35. Cover Her Body by Eleanor Sullivan
36. Dark Mind by Jennifer Chase
37. Darkness Rising by Ross M. Kitson
38. A Darkness Shattered by Bruce Clothier
39. Daughter of Hauk by KateMarie Collins ~ Reviewed
40. Death’s Hand by SM Reine
41. A Demon Bound by Debra Dunbar ~ Reviewed
42. The Divorce Girl by Caryn Miriam-Goldberg ~ Reviewed
43. Dracula by Bram Stoker ~ Read
44. Dragonfriend by Roger Eschbacher
45. Edgar Allan Poe’s Complete Poetical Works
46. The Egyptian Affair by A.M. Khalifa
47. Emily Dickinson, Superhero – Vol. 1 by Eric Nixon
48. Enter Sandman by Michael Edward
49. The Escape of Princess Madeline by Kirstin Pulioff
50. Eternity by Chad Swayden
51. An Explosive Time by Julia Hughes
52. Facebook breaks up marriages by Vonda Norwood ~ Reviewed
53. The Fall by Chana Keefer
54. Familiar Quotations by Various
55. Fat Assassins by Marita Fowler
56. Fatal Retribution by Diana Graves
57. February the Fifth by Derek Haines
58. Fighting the Devil by Jeannie Walker ~ Reviewed
59. Finless by Davee Jones ~ Reviewed
60. Fire Baptized by Kenya Wright ~ Reviewed
61. Flappers and Philosophers by F. Scott Fitzgerald
62. A Flash of Fantasy by Donna B. Nichol
63. Flashback to the Dragon by Terri L. Powers ~ Reviewed
64. Flashman at the Charge by George MacDonald Fraser
65. The Foolish and the Weak by G.A. Albrethsen
66. Geek Girl #0 by Sam Johnson
67. Gabriel by Tina Pollick ~ Reviewed
68. Glitter and Trauma by Emma Kathryn
69. Gifted by Prudence MacLeod ~ Read
70. The Good Dr. Grant by Karen Einsel ~ Reviewed
71. Gray Justice by Alan McDermott
72. The Great Twitter Adventure by Kathy Lynn Hall
73. H.E.R.O. Metamorphosis by Kevin Rau ~ Reviewed
74. The Haunted Hillerman House by Shannon Bailey
75. Haunting Refrain by Ellis Vidler
76. The Healing Heart by Jennifer Howard
77. Heaven Falls by Winslow Eliot
78. The Highlander by Zoe Saadia
79. Hybrid by Vanessa Wester
80. Id by Paul Craig
81. If We Dare To Dream by Collette Scott ~ Reviewed
82. In Her Name – First Contact by Michael R. Hicks
83. Indie authors make better lovers by Vonda Norwood
84. In Her Name: Empire by Michael R. Hicks
85. Invisible by Jeanne Brannon
86. It ain’t Shakespeare, but oh how it glows by Jo VonBargen
87. Ivanhoe by Sir Walter Scott ~ Read
88. I’ve Been Better by Steve Ramirez ~ Reviewed
89. Jaguar Sun by Martha Bourke ~ Reviewed
90. JET by Russell Blake
91. Joe Vampire by Steven Luna
92. A Journey to the Center of the Earth by Jules Verne ~ Read
93. Kansas City Noir edited by Steve Paul
94. The Key ~ Felicia Rogers
95. Killer Instinct by Zoe Sharp ~ Reviewed
96. Killing Hope by Keith Houghton
97. Killing in Okaraygua by Stuart Levine
98. Kindle User’s Guide by Amazon ~ Read
99. Lake Caerwych by J. Conrad ~ Reviewed
100. The Last Good Knight by Connie J. Jasperson
101. The Last Great Wizard of Yden by S.G. Rogers
102. The Lemon Tree by Ilil Arbel
103. Life on the Mississippi by Mark Twain
104. Light Masters: Number 13 by MG Wells ~ Reviewed
105. Lilith by Victoria Limbert
106. Lost in the Seven Worlds by Petronela Ungureanu
107. The Lost Tourist Franchise by Charles Dougherty
108. The Lost World by Arthur Conan Doyle ~ Read
109. The Loved, the Lost, the Dreaming by Michelle Browne
110. The Lucky Boy by Caroline Gerardo
111. Maiden Behind the Mask by Tara Chevrestt ~ Reviewed
112. Mantequero by Jenny Twist ~ Reviewed
113. The Man Who Knew Too Much by G.K. Chesterton
114. Marinade by Rebecca Ratliff
115. Mark of the Loon by Molly Greene
116. Mathion: Book One of the Mavonduri by Jeff Shanley
117. Matriculated Death by Maryanne M. Wells
118. Medical Error by Richard Mabry
119. Megan’s Way by Melissa Foster
120. Merkabah Rider, Tales of a High Planes Drifter by Edward M. Erdelach ~ Reviewed
121. Merkabah Rider, The Mensch with no Name by Edward M. Erdelach
122. The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood by Howard Pyle ~ Read
123. The Merry-Go-Round by Donna Fasano ~ Reviewed
124. Messages from Henry by Rebecca Scarberry ~ Reviewed
125. Moon over Madness by Teri Heyer
126. The Moon Poem and other strange jingle jangles by Gary Henry (that’s me)
127. Murder Deja Vu by Polly Iyer
128. A Murderous Game by Patricia Paris
129. My Man Jeeves by P.G. Wodehouse ~ Read
130. My Memories of a Future Life by Roz Morris
131. My Prison Without Bars by Taylor Fulks
132. My Superhero Sister by Toni Lotiempo
133. Nephilim Genesis of Evil by Renee Pawlish ~ Reviewed
134. Never Say Sorry by Rose Edmunds
135. The Nightlife: New York by Travis Luedke
136. No Mercy by Wendy Cartmell
137. No Strings Attached by Lily Bishop
138. Once Upon a Nightmare by George McKelle
139. On the Origin of Species by Charles Darwin
140. One Shade of Red by Scott Bury
141. On Unfaithful Wings by Bruce Blake
142. Ooze by J.J. Turner
143. The Ophelia Trap by Kate Burns ~ Reviewed
144. Opportunities: How to find them and what to do with them by Mary Gindling
145. The Orgasm Rebellion by Frank Lingo
146. Pax in the Land of Women by Monica La Porta
147. The People of the Mist by H. Rider Haggard ~ Read
148. The Priest by Monica La Porta ~ Reviewed
149. The Prophecy by Raine Thomas
150. The Quickening by Mari Bella ~ Reviewed
151. Rag Doll by Rebecca Scarberry
152. Red Mojo Mama by Kathy Lynn Hall ~ reviewed
153. Riot Act by Zoe Sharp
154. Riser by Becca C. Smith
155. Robin in the Hood by Diane J. Reed
156. Rock ‘n’ Roll Suicide by Geoffry David West
157. The Ruby Brooch by Katherine Logan – Reviewed
158. Sand by Lili Tufel, Valerie Douglas and J. Darroll Hall
159. Saving Malaya by Victor Sanchez
160. Saving Mr. Sharp by Dan Karasek
162. Scrapped by Mollie Cox Bryan
163. Seasons by David Antrobus, Edward Lorn, J.D. Mader, Jo-Anne Teal
164. The Second Chances of Priam Wood by Alexander Rigby
165. Seeking a Scribe by Marsha A. Moore
166. The Selkie Spell by Sophie Moss ~ Reviewed
167. The Sexy and the Undead by Charity Parkerson
168. She’s Not There by Marla Madison
169. The South River Incident by Ann Mullen
170. The Strange Case of Dr. Jeckyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson
171. Summer Winds by Wanda P. Smith
172. The Super Spies and the Cat Lady Killer by Lisa Orchard
173. Tales of the Jazz Age by F. Scott Fitzgerald
174. The Tangled Web by J.P. Lane ~ Reviewed
175. Tell Them You’re Fabulous by Kathy Lynn Hall
176. The Templar Agenda by John Paul Davis ~ Reviewed
177. This Side of Paradise by F. Scott Fitzgerald
178. Tied up Heart by Veronica Brannon
179. Tomb and Graves (Emily Dickinson, Superhero) by Eric Nixon
180. Touching Smoke by Airicka Phoenix
181. Traces of Kara by Melissa Foster
182. Tro-tros and Potholes by Laura Enridge
183. Twixt by Diane J. Reed ~ Reviewed
184. Under a Vulgar Sun by A.D. Bloom
185. Verliege by Micheal Rivers
186. View From My Soul by Jill Pritchett ~ Reviewed
187. Vs. Reality by Blake Northcott ~ Reviewed
188. War is Atypical by C.E. Takem
189. Wearing the Cape by Marion G. Harmon ~ Reviewed
190. West Pacific Supers: Rising Tide by K.M. Johnson-Weider
191. What happened to Jory and other dark departures by Gary Henry (that’s me!)
192. What is a Hero? by Paige Ewing
193. Wildlife by Michael Modzelewski
194. The Wild Man of the West by R.M. Ballantyne
195. The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum
196. Working for Heat by Donovan Sotam
197. WPS: Camille and the Supernovas by K.M. Johnson-Weider ~ Read
198. You Wish by Terry Tyler
199. ZURI: A Love Story by Ruth Harris
awww I see my book there 🙂 also reading Gray Justice by Alan McDermott
Well, of course, silly!
Don’t see TJRM. Boo hoo.
Wow. Now that’s a lot of reading! Hope to see ‘Genome’ on your list soon. Best of luck and thanks for all the encouragement you give.
Gary
http://bit.ly/I33VR8
Would love for you to review my new novel, The Treasure of the Seas. Here is a link to Amazon.
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=joseph+Gaspare+LoNigro
I have a new cozy/suspense novel called “Scrambled.” You can find it here: http://www.amazon.com/Scrambled-Susan-Sleuth-Mystery-Volume/dp/1461188083/ref=sr_1_cc_1?s=aps&ie=UTF8&qid=1348506623&sr=1-1-catcorr&keywords=scrambled+cozy
Would you be interested in a YA fantasy adventure fiction with slight romance?
My new novel is called “Dynasty O’Shea” available on https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/251290 and http://www.amazon.com/Dynasty-OShea-Throne-Gammalon-ebook/dp/B009VWXWQ2/ref=pd_rhf_ee_p_img_2
I appreciate what you’re doing for indie writers. I have two new business books published in September 2012. TRANSFORMATION OF A DOUBTING THOMAS just received honorable mention in the New England Book Festival- targets out-of-work people, complacent employees, and business leaders–all have a stake in this recovery. FROM FEAR TO SUCCESS dedicated to practical approach to get over the anxiety of public speaking. http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B00A6Z5IUQ
Thanks again
Sunspots is a love story of loss and redemption and ghosts that haunt our lives and our houses.
I hope you review it.
I am amazed at the service you provide. I am very excited at the prospect of you reading my book.
‘Will Proles’ Rise’ A YA novel about a victimised member of the underclass who discovers he has the ability to rise up. Will he make the noble decisions that he seemed so capable of making when he was powerless?
I would love a sincere review.
My first novel, Miriam the Medium (Simon & Schuster, 2004) was nominated for the Harold U. Ribelow Award. My new novel, Kaylee’s Ghost, (CreateSpace, 11/27/2012), is intriguing mix of family drama and contemporary fantasy, A mesmerizing story about life here on Earth and after we’ve passed on, Kaylee’s Ghost is also a domestic drama spanning five generations, a tale about forgiveness, letting go and discovering who we are meant to be, no matter how unusual.
Like Miriam Kaminsky, I am a phone psychic who lives in Great Neck, N.Y.. Articles have been written about me in such places as Redbook, The Jerusalem Post, the Dutch Magazine, TV GID, and the Long Island section of the New York Times. I’ve chronicled my own psychic experiences in Newsweek (My Turn), and The New York Times (Lives) which can be read on my website at http://rochellejewelshapiro.com
The “where to buy”:
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_ss_c_0_14?url=search-alias%3Ddigital-text&field-keywords=kaylee%27s+ghost&sprefix=kaylee%27s+ghost%2Caps%2C741
A blog review by you would be so appreciated. Publishing with a big house opens doors. Indie writers have to squirm through the mailbox slot. :}
Thank you for your great contribution. Sincerely, Rochelle Jewel Shapiro
Holy Shnikeys, that’ a LOT of reading!
Well, if you ever get a chance, maybe you’ll consider three of my books. I don’t have any awards or nominations…I’m just a dad of 11 kids and ex-cartoonist who likes telling stories to other people.
PRELUDE TO A HERO (Chronicles of a Hero #0.5) Epic Fantasy/Humor
“Wendell is a young man who learns what his potential is while on a strange, enchanted world with a funny old wizard and ugly troll to mentor and guide him. Prelude to a Hero, the debut book about how Wendell came to be the one expected to save an entire world. . . by accident.”
Book Trailer: http://youtu.be/ZqjhIEXIWYM
Can buy here: http://www.amazon.com/Prelude-Hero-Chronicles-ebook/dp/B00538DUNI/ref=sr_1_1_title_1_kin?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1359505141&sr=1-1&keywords=prelude+to+a+hero
RACE TO TIL-THORIN (Chronicles of a Hero #1) Epic Fantasy/Humor
“With the help of Chuck, Dax and a spitfire gnome named Alhannah, Wendell P. Dipmier is thrust into circumstances he never could have imagined. Accepting the mantle of the Hero will force him to find the courage and rise to the challenges before him…or destroy those around him.
Wendell’s old life is about to end…in more ways than one.”
Book Trailer: http://youtu.be/IvrHriV0iEk
Can buy here: http://www.amazon.com/Race-Til-Thorin-Chronicles-Hero-ebook/dp/B00AGW3T64/ref=sr_1_2_title_0_main?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1359505379&sr=1-2&keywords=race+to+til-thorin
DEMONI VANKIL (Fieldguides for Chronicles) Fantasy/Mystery/Romance
“An ancient puzzle box.
Fourteen mysterious letters.
A Council of Whispers.
…and a clerk.
Discover the 700 year old secret millions died to protect.”
Book Trailer: http://youtu.be/UbRU76CanUE
Can buy here: http://www.amazon.com/Demoni-Vankil-Luckyfellers-Fieldguide-ebook/dp/B005ONI5B4/ref=sr_1_1_title_1_kin?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1359505526&sr=1-1&keywords=demoni+vankil
Hope that’s not too overwhelming…? Anyway, you can always stop by and see what’s happening at the main website, where I try my best to entertain youth and young-at-heart alike.
http://wantedhero.com
Thanks for any consideration…even if you can’t get to me =).
-Jaime
Thanks Gary! I see my book on your list! I hope you enjoy it! 🙂
I’m sure I will — Liked he sample a lot.
Hey Gary! Thanks for taking the time out to read indie books! People like you are a God-send. I’m not sure what your favorite genres are but I hope YA fantasy tickles your fancy! Please check out my book WINDLESS here: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00BNOCUSC
Thanks!
Audrey
Hey Gary!
I have a book I would like for you consider reviewing. It is Pie An Old Brown Horse(That Knows What He Is Doing) The purchase sight is http://www.outskirtspress.com/pie/ You can check my website for some of the other blog reviews. Hope you like it and Happy Trails To You!
My name is Eddie Thompkins, author of the novel Mogadishu Diaries Bloodlines. Mogadishu Diaries is based on my personal experience as a US Marine peacekeeper during Operation Restore Hope from 9 December 1992 until 21 March 1993. Mogadishu Diaries is a novel which captures: the pursuit of a beloved and revered warlord, the disarming an entire community and its unintended consequences, my conscience vs. the Rules of Engagement, and my courtship of a beautiful Somali interpreter named Ayan.
I would be honored for you to review my book.
My book is free of charge on Smashwords.
https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/280632
Book Trailer
Kind Regards,
Eddie Thompkins
GySgt USMC (ret)
I 100% recommend The Ark Trilogy by Jesse Daro. Great trilogy of titles. Check it out when you have time!
Would love for you to review my book: Softly Say Goodbye.
Thank you.
Hey Gary,
When you’re ready for a scifi spoof that’s about 100 pages, please check out ‘Arlo and Jake Enlist’.
It’s the first in a series about a retired software engineer who is conscripted into a Space Naval Fleet (the good guys) to fight the bad guys who want to aquaform planets, including Earth!
It’s a fun Space Opera spoof series; book 2 ‘Arlo and Jake Galactic Bootcamp’ is coming soon!
Best of luck!
http://amzn.to/11jkmDX
http://bit.ly/Tw22CT
Hello Gary!
Quite a list of readings, but it sounds as though you are up for a challenge, or you wouldn’t be reviewing in the first place. My hat is off to you sir!
I would like to add one more to your list of reads, please. ‘Darkness Knows Me’ is the first in my Olivia Gates and Will Green crime series set in Deep Ellum-Dallas Texas. This is a crime novel which includes everything one expects to read in a crime novel – murder, psychopathy, crime scene description, forensic insights, grit and police procedure, as well as personal relationship conflicts between the characters
Please click the link to the Amazon book blurb for more details.
Thank you very much for your time and consideration.
Blessings,
Chrinda Jones
Hello Gary,
Please consider adding ‘Treasure of the Anasazi’ to your reading list. A 1953 adventure/thriller.
The Anasazi are very much alive, living deep within the Restricted Area of Mesa Verde. Unless Jack Trader can stop ruthless treasure hunters from discovering their village, the Anasazi will take matters into their own hands. Transformation of the ‘coyote people’ will lead to deadly consequences.
The link on Amazon is http://www.goo.gl/4CUCR. The book trailer can be seen at my website.
Thanks from a fellow Kansan,
Mike Watson
Hey there Gary,
I wasn’t sure where to find your email address, so I thought I’d leave my review request here. The book I’d like to request a review for is my debut zombie adventure novel, OUR UNDEAD.
Here is the synopsis: “In a disease ridden, present day, Portland, Oregon, an unlikely connection develops between two teenagers and an undead man, when their coincidental meeting sends them trekking to Hollywood, California, on a revealing journey of relationships, morality and conspiracy.”
If you are interested, you can find more info here, as well as a 20% sample of the ebook: http://www.amazon.com/Our-Undead-Abe-ebook/dp/B00BHKZKUW/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1373741448&sr=1-1&keywords=our+undead
Thanks for your time and for supporting independent authors!
All the best,
Theo Vigo
Gary, great site! If you like cozy mysteries and a bit of comedy, I would love to have you review my book(s). Drema J Reed, KILLER IMAGE and KILLER GENES on amazon. Couldn’t provide a like if my life depended on it. However, my publisher is http://www.cozycatpress.com. Maybe that has a link to amazon. Happy reading.
How can I get you to read my first novel?
Dirtball: The Diaries of a Worthless Somebody is an intriguing tale of one man’s pessimistic journey to see the glass half full. Discover EO, as he struggles to break through the negative walls in life and find the level of happiness that he so desperately desires. Explore his life of heartache, deception, and triumph. In this captivating autobiographical novel that only mature audiences can truly embrace.
where do we send the book for review?
Sorry, doesn’t work that way. https://honestindiebookreviews.wordpress.com/submitting-books-for-review/
Hey! Thanks for all of the reviews you write. I just pushed out a novella:
For your consideration. Have a great day!
Hi Gary! Would you consider reading and reviewing my YA paranormal about Bigfoot?
Hugs from Texas!!!
You might like “Lines You Do Not Cross” Murder/Romance available at barnesandnoble.com and amazon.com
Don’t know how you feel about Young Adult Science fiction, but I wrote this novel in a collaborative effort with former students and they are chomping on the bit for another review and we found you!
It is available in print form or e-read on Amazon, barnesandnoble.com and Createspace.
Hello! For your consideration, For Queen or Country (fantasy genre).
Thanks for helping out all the indies.
Hello. My name is Mike. As Kane S. Latranz, I am a free lance writer of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry in Albuquerque. I’ve had a realization for some time now about an aspect of entropy in general and about the theoretical heat death of the universe in particular, a projected future state of complete entropy, that I turned into a short book. If you might be interested in a review copy I could get one to you later this month.
Thanks for your time. Sincerely, Michael R. Donohoe/Kane S. Latranz. 505-615-9011
Could a “Heat Death” be Necessary for Life?
The Musings of a Panentheist
Authored by Mr. Kane S. Latranz
Edition: 1
WE HAVE MET THE “HEAT DEATH” OF THE UNIVERSE IN PROGRESS, AND IT IS… US?
“Organic cells form, reproduce, and die within complex organisms that are born, reproduce, and die, within species and civilizations that eventually segue into new species and civilizations or simply carry on until they become extinct. All because stars are born, age, die, and are replaced, some former and current stars facilitating habitable planets and life.”
The quick version is simple and seems irrefutable. “We are star stuff.” Star stuff comes from dead stars. The death of stars contributes to the theoretical heat death of the universe expected to run its course trillions upon trillions of years from now. Wouldn’t it be fair then to say that the existence of Earth, life, and you and I are aspects of the heat death in progress? Yet I have never found this pointed out.
Although it relates to disorder in certain respects, people often become confused about “entropy,” the second law of thermodynamics, as disorder. So, it is being redefined in many introductory textbooks for physics and chemistry as energy dispersal thanks to retired chemistry professor, Frank L. Lambert. “Energetically, the second law of thermodynamics favors the formation of the majority of all known complex and ordered chemical compounds from the simpler elements. Thus, contrary to popular opinion, the second law does not dictate the decrease of ordered structure in its predictions, it only demands a “spreading out” of energy in all processes.”–Frank L. Lambert, from the website: :2ndlaw.oxy.edu.
This all comes as a confirmation of something I have wrestled with for some time as a non-scientist, although science does run in my family. Doing a lot of reading that sometimes left me scratching my head in regard to the traditional definition of the second law, (Such as work by Stephen Hawking.), I discerned many processes that would be defined as entropy that also happen to be necessary for evolution and life.
All of these issues are addressed in the title essay in this short book which was rated 5 stars on Goodreads. There are also several poems pondering aspects of science and/or spirituality, often from a Panentheist perspective, one of which appeared in Philosophy Now Magazine.
Celebrated physicist and author, Louis Del Monte. “Excellent question. Yes, life is an aspect of the “heat death” in progress.” via Twitter. https://twitter.com/KaneLatranz
“…Latranz is a burgeoning Albuquerque author with obvious skill at his craft.”~Local i.Q. newspaper.
“Could a “Heat Death” be Necessary for Life?” by Mr. Kane S. Latranz
Greetings,
I thank you for your efforts. People willing to read books by independent authors are taking a risk with the most valuable asset, time. I hope you’ll consider spending some of that on my novel.
The Journals of Bob Drifter
As an extraordinary man tries to discover his humanity, a great darkness creeps ever closer, gaining power with every day. The unlikeliest of heroes must battle a creature obsessed with death. Welcome to the world of those who watch over the dead.
Thank you for your consideration,
V/R
M.L.S. Weech