Horror Story Excerpt: “Under the Skin”

The following is an excerpt from the short horror story “Under the Skin”, which is featured in the collection Blood, Magic & a Concubine. It is available through Smashwords, Kindle, Nook, Diesel, Xinxii , ibooks and at other online sellers. Be warned: you will find a bit of graphic content in the story.

“Under the Skin” – excerpt

Randall Kagan ached. A rotten, soreness crept over him as he woke and his eyes adjusted to the motel room’s darkness. His muscles felt as though they were trying to knit themselves back together, ripped fiber by ripped fiber. As he edged closer to wakefulness, he realized that a sticky glaze covered his pained body and aching fingers. The scent of blood and flesh crept into his nostrils and seeped into his brain.

“Jesus, not again,” he whispered into the blackness. He sat up quickly and flicked on the small table lamp next to the ratty bed. A bloody stump, a slender thumb with a painted blue nail rolled from his chest down to the blood soaked bed sheets.

His heart beat faster, thrumming in his chest and keeping almost perfect time with the steady flicker from the lamp’s pale light. He panned the room and saw the fullness of the atrocity and the horrors that he didn’t remember committing.

A bloody smiley face grinned down at him from the far wall. Intestines lay draped around the television and dresser like strands of tinsel on a Christmas tree. The rest of the dead girl’s body lay in pieces here and there around the room.

Kagan leaned over the side of the bed and vomited. How could a person do these things and not remember? He’d asked the familiar question a thousand times over the last two months. The answer was in front of him every time he stepped in front of a mirror. He’d peered into himself and seen the monster; he’d gazed upon the anatomy of the terrible that made a home deep within his wretched mind. He could feel it, the thing within, writhing inside of him even now, wanting to be let out to play. Even worse, he could feel them calling to him, pulling him somewhere.

The desert.

The desert had been calling him ever since the killings began. Even Ahiga, Doli’s grandfather had told Kagan that he needed to go into the desert and that it might be the one place that could purify him.

It didn’t make sense to Kagan, but none of what was happening really did. The blackouts, the murders, the crimson eyes watching in his dreams whenever he dared fall asleep… it was all the  workings of a crazy mind, he feared. If the desert didn’t bring answers, he hoped that it might at least be able to grant him death.

He glanced at the clock – two in the morning. It was still early and that was good. He needed to make a stop in Albuquerque to say goodbye to his sister and then he would listen to the voices within that urged him into the wilderness. He had to move fast too. The law was after him. Every cop and meter maid in the West probably knew his face by now and he didn’t figure shaving his head had provided him with much of a disguise.

He turned off the lamp so he wouldn’t have to look at the mess.

To find out what Kagan discovers in the desert, you can head to one of the retailers above and grab the collection. It’s currently only 99 cents, and I truly appreciate it!

Determining the Right Price for Books on the Kindle and Other E-Readers

The good thing about pricing for e-books is that nothing is set in stone when it comes to price and you have the ultimate control. In fact, you can change everything about your books to see if it helps with your sales: price, cover, description and even the text are malleable in this new era. The bad thing about pricing is, strangely enough, the same thing. Since there is no standard number, it’s hard to know how to find the sweet spot for pricing

In this post, I’m going to talk about my current pricing structure and I’d be happy to listen to any input that readers and other authors have.

Readers: I’m interested in how you decide how much to spend and where to spend it. What is the limit that you spend on an e-book? How much does genre factor into the amount that you are willing to spend? How much more are you willing to spend on a name you know and trust?

Writers: I’m interested in how you chose the prices for your own books and what led you to make that decision. And yes, I know marketing is hard so if you have a book that you are selling you should feel free to add a link in your comment here.

My current pricing structure looks like this:

Short Story Collections or a long short story up to 20,000 words is 99 cents

Novellas, short novels and longer
collections
that fall between 20,000 and 60,000 words are $2.99

Novels that are 60,000 to 90,000 words are
$3.99

Also, I have a first book in a series coming out this year and I will likely price that initial offering at a slightly lower price to start – maybe at $1.99 or $2.99. Or I will try to charge the regular $3.99 and lower the price on the first one when the second book comes out. Or I will… you see, I could do this for days and still not have the right answer. It’s going to be all about experimenting. I’m also going to have to research to see what the good price points are for different genres.

Keep in mind that these are just the current prices that I will be playing with over the next year. They probably aren’t right for everyone and they might not even be right for me. Also, these prices don’t account for putting books on sale, changes in the market or changes in the gray matter sitting behind my eyes that cause me to make drastic decisions.

I’m looking forward to hearing what any and all of you have to say about e-book prices.

Kindle Reading List

I love my Kindle (despite my ongoing fling with printed research texts), and I love that I can find books by indie authors and traditionally published authors who are putting up their backlists and writing new, independent works. It means that there is going to be a lot more variety out there and I believe that’s a great thing.

Of course, there are going to be some indie books that are just plain rotten. That’s how it goes. By reading samples of books, I can pretty much determine what I am going to like and what I won’t. Separating the good from the bad (at least according to your own personal taste) isn’t hard. It really isn’t any different from going to the bookstore and opening a book whose cover and description grab you and reading the first few pages. So far, I’ve been very pleased with the books I’ve bought from independent publishers.

Here’s my current Kindle reading list, along with links. This should take me a few weeks to get through and then I will be adding more and delving deeper trying to find great indie authors.

The List and Origin by J.A. Konrath. The first books I read by Konrath were in the Jack Daniels series of mysteries. They are good fun, and I expect these will be the same. Writers, and readers who are interested, should check out his Newbie’s Guide to Publishing blog. It’s full of information and fun to read.

The Fixer: A Lawson Vampire Novel by Jon F. Merz. I’ve read other stories from Merz, and from the brief interactions that I’ve had with him online, he seems like a genuinely nice guy who is passionate about telling stories. Also, he’s a frigging ninja!

Run by Blake Crouch. This book as one of the best descriptions I’ve ever read. Reviews look good too. I’m excited to start this one!

Jimmy Stone’s Ghost Town by Scott Neumyer. I know this book is for younger folks than I am, but the description and the reviews really made me want to read it.

The links I’ve included all go to the Kindle store. However, I’m sure that most of these books are also available for other e-reading devices.

I Cheated on My Kindle

I love my Kindle and I use it often. However, I’ve been cheating on it with some print books lately, namely books that I use for research. For example, the latest paper book I bought was Practical Homicide Investigation: Tactics, Procedures, and Forensics Techniques. It is over 1000 pages long and it has tons of great information that is readily usable by someone who writes the types of things that I do.

Because I’m using the book for research – even though I’m reading it cover to cover right now – I know that there is going to be a lot of flipping back and forth, adding sticky notes as reminders and whatnot. I know that bookmarks are possible with e-readers, but paging through a book that I’m using for research just seems much more natural to me. I imagine that this will change in the future as these e-readers evolve. How do you feel about e-readers for research books? Are there functions or features that I’ve missed?

By the way, if you write anything dealing with death, police procedure, forensics, murderers and the like, you should really check out Practical Homicide Investigation. It isn’t cheap, but it will become an indispensible research partner, I’m sure. Sometime in the next few days, I will write a post that looks at some of the topics the book covers.

Blood, Magic & a Concubine: 3 Dark Urban Fantasy Tales

UPDATE: Now available on Amazon.

I just released a short digital collection of dark urban fantasy called Blood, Magic a & Concubine. The collection  is approximately 20,000 words in length and is a mere .99 cents. It will be available on Amazon for the Kindle, Barnes & Noble for the Nook, and other online retailers soon. Currently, you can find the ebook on Smashwords, which also offers a free preview. I will update the post as soon as it is live in other areas. Here’s a little bit about the 3 stories.

“Blood, Magic & a Concubine”: Johnny Stone is a wizard who fixes things and makes problems go away in the sprawling subterranean city of Underbelly. When someone kidnaps Manny the Goon’s girl, he enlists Johnny to find and rescue her. But Manny is holding back information, which doesn’t make Johnny’s job easy, not even when he enlists the help of a Nordic god.

“The Naughty List”: Seven-year-old Janie’s life isn’t so great. Lyle keeps coming back and being mean to her and her mom, and now Mom spends all of her time sleeping in her room. Thankfully, it’s Christmas, and in her letter to Santa, Janie asked for help with Lyle. When Santa and his elves get the letter, they are eager to help. Things might not go so well for Lyle.

“Under the Skin”: Kagan wakes up in a pool of blood. It isn’t the first time he’s woken up and found shredded human remains, and he fears it won’t be the last. He’s already killed someone he loves, even though he doesn’t remember doing it. There is something inside of him. He can feel it. Heeding the advice of a Navajo shaman, as well as the constant urging of the things living within him, he and his sister set out for the New Mexico desert to see if he can find answers.

Blood, Magic & a Concubine also includes an Excerpt from Breaking Glass, an upcoming novella featuring Thomas Rhymes.

Blood, Magic & a Concubine

Urban Fantasy Short Story Now Available on Amazon

The rights to my urban fantasy short story “Blood, Magic, and a Concubine” reverted to me a few weeks ago – the magazine that held the rights closed and all rights reverted to authors and artists. I was sorry to see the magazine go, but I figured I might as well make the best of the situation. So, I uploaded the story to Amazon as a Kindle title. It’s just 99 cents, and it includes an excerpt from my novella Meat City in Meat City & Other Stories, which is available for purchase through Amazon, Black Bed Sheet Books, and other stores.

I thought I would add an excerpt from “Blood, Magic, and a Concubine” here so you can see if it is something that you might like to read. Other tales from Underbelly are coming as well, including “Nine-Tenths”, which will be a free story on this site, and a novella called Light of the Silvery Moon, which features Johnny Stone and a pack of irate werewolves who are trying to figure out who killed a prominent member of the Blackpool Pack.

Enough of my rambling, click for the excerpt.




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