Children's book
Saint Nick and the Space Nicks *
In this new spin to the traditional Christmas story, follow Saint Nick and his new friend Venick from Venus, as they travel through space and meet all of the "Space Nicks." "St. Nick goes intergalactical... a hypothetical collaboration between Clement Clarke Moore, who wrote ‘The Night Before Christmas’, and the incomparable Dr. Suess."
Fiction
The Bard Club
This is an American novel about five country children and a school-teacher who changes their lives and opens their minds through the writings of William Shakespeare. The story takes place during World War II (1944/1945) in the quaint fishing village of Solomons, Maryland. Teacher, Bessie McMath begins a log to record events of the town and of its people taken from the writings of her students through their interpretation of Shakespeare's works. The story ends when members of the Bard Club show their spunk and become national heroes due to a bizarre series of events that lead to the capture of a German submarine.
Anubis Rex
Germ warfare, DNA exploitation and nanotechnology enter the inner sanctum and world affairs as scary and as real in what is today's unquestionable dilemma: the fate of mankind. In 1937, germ warfare is suspect as Ian Cooper, an expert in infectious pathology, is hired by the Federal Center for Disease Control and Prevention to investigate a contagious disease traced to the Arab world. Nodar Chamish, undercover agent for Donovan's Elite, knows differently. He reveals Hitler's plan to create a master race from an ancient gene discovered in the Sudan. The dangerous and beautiful Alexander Christie, the ultimate German biomedical creation, stalks Cooper with dangerous intent. After Germany's defeat, Dr. Leslie Mbuta investigates the secreted Kremlin Files captured from Germany in W.W.II and discovers a deadly secret. “... something stirs in the silence.”A thriller with all the characters you want to know and follow throughout this tale of suspense and intrigue. Well rounded like a fine wine.
Historic terror fiction novella
Naga Basa
On February 19, 1945, five months before the atomic bombs were dropped on Japan an invasion took place off the Burma coast on the island of Ramree where a slaughter took place by allied troops against Japanese defenses. Operation Matador was reported by Vice-Admiral Sir Arthur J. Power, Commander-In-Chief , East Indies Station, and appeared in the London Gazzette on Friday, 23 April, 1948. The news of this event had been buried due to the ending of WII., but once discovered and researched, this news was recorded in the Guinness Book of Records as the most people ever killed in a single action by an animal specie called Stinky Face, an event recorded as the greatest animal disaster ever. Naga Basa is a fictional adaptation of the human condition and of the horrors that surrounded the Ramree blood bath. This story reaches into the human psyche of death and introduces us to a new Mesozoic era, the Marasic Period of an evolved creature that people of the Malays call Naga Basa. (Dragon Fish) Sex, love, death and international intrigue round out this tale of an indestructible creature.
Fictional Memoir
Ebb Of The River
"Ebb Of The River is a novel about a boy and a river; about a small country town; about growing up ; about the wonders of nature, and about grownups and kids. It is an all American story that imparts the purity and the natural wisdom in a journey through life. It is a tale of a simpler time, of human and divine nature, of innocence and of experiences in earth's nature in Maryland's tidewater country. It is an adventure of a boy growing up with, and learning from a river and from his peers. American folklore, comedy, as well as shameful racial history are the backdrops of a boy coming of age. Murder, mystery and interracial tangles lead to the drama of survival and how a town overcomes its prejudices through the community spirit of its people.... does what a good novel should, create
character, evoke time and place, and examine moral character -- what the Mississippi was to Huck Finn, the Patuxent in Maryland is to Ebb." The Los Angeles Times