Available now on:
All is not well in the big city of Grand Rapids. Anti-Zombie Loyalists, loyalists of the late William Lettner, have set the city ablaze... Or so thinks the mayor, ruling city council and the military authority. Little do they know, a snake dwells in their midst, creating this chaos, planning an overthrow of the city’s leadership, with intentions much like Lettner: eradicate the non-living nuisances, and also any of the living who get in the way.
Battle will rage from Grand Rapids streets, into the UCRA enclosure where the city’s protected undead wander, to a small train station and military encampment in the village of Lamont.
And all is not well for Captain Jacob Billet. Coming out of a 3-month coma, he finds he has changed. Not for the better. With the deceased William Lettner dogging his every move, and knowing his days are most likely numbered, Jake just wants to make it to his old homestead before his condition sets him on a different, and very much undesirable path.
About the Author: Peter Welmerink was born and raised on the west side of pre-apocalyptic Grand Rapids, Michigan. He writes Fantasy, Military SciFi, and other wanderings into action-adventure. His work has been published in ye olde wood pulp print and electronic-online publications. He is the co-author of the Viking berserker novel, BEDLAM UNLEASHED, written with Steven Shrewsbury. TRANSPORT was his first solo novel venture. He is married with a small barbarian tribe of three boys.
Find out more about his works and upcoming projects at:
www.peterwelmerink.com
What others are saying about TRANSPORT:
...great cover...
...absolutely love the
interior illustrations...top notch...
...impressed with the
caliber of the writing in this one...
---Bee's
Knees Review
...faced with the two most
common threats in modern horror, zombies and basic human nature...it does not
feel like something we have seen time and time again...
---The Rage
Circus vs The Soulless Void Reviews
...far more compelling
than most of the zombie stories you’re likely to pick up...
...a fascinating sign of
where zombie narrative, road narrative, and narrative in general might be
moving...
---L. Andrew
Cooper's Horrific Scribblings


No comments:
Post a Comment