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The Rabbit Hole Volume Four: Weird stories Special issue: Madness Kindle Edition
Twenty-five authors take you on trips into madness. Twenty-nine delightfully weird stories which will make you laugh, make you cry, and make you wonder about reality. All you need do is follow that helpful little cottontail for another voyage down the Rabbit Hole.
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateOctober 29, 2021
- File size10.0 MB
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See full series- Kindle Price:$6.97By placing your order, you're purchasing a license to the content and you agree to the Kindle Store Terms of Use.
- Kindle Price:$11.95By placing your order, you're purchasing a license to the content and you agree to the Kindle Store Terms of Use.
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This option includes 3 books.
This option includes 5 books.
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Product details
- ASIN : B09GP1XL88
- Publisher : The Writer's Coop (October 29, 2021)
- Publication date : October 29, 2021
- Language : English
- File size : 10.0 MB
- Simultaneous device usage : Unlimited
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 311 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,734,280 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #5,799 in Fantasy Anthologies & Short Stories (Kindle Store)
- #8,495 in Fiction Anthologies
- #9,602 in Contemporary Fantasy (Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors
Margret Treiber is an award-winning writer with Azoth Khem Publications and serves as editor-in-chief for the speculative fiction humor magazine, Sci-Fi Lampoon. When she is not writing or working at her day job with technology, she helps her birds and dogs break things for her spouse to fix. Her fiction has appeared in a number of publications. Links to her short stories, novels, and upcoming work can be found on her website at www dot the-margret dot com and on Amazon.
Questions? Thoughts? Gripes? Discuss "Agony of the Gods" at Doc Tom's WebSite http://tomwolosz.com. where you can also follow his blog and see some great Adirondack photos.
Tom “Doc Tom” Wolosz grew up in NYC, but developed an unexpected love of the outdoors, and reading Science Fiction and Fantasy (LOTR about 25 times, but no, he never learned to speak Elvish). The former led him into the field of Geology and the latter into bookstores. The end result was a Ph. D. in Geology, a life-long love of books, and an urge to write. The Ph. D. landed him in Plattsburgh, NY and a job teaching about rocks, fossils, dinosaurs and killer comets at SUNY Plattsburgh. While there he also developed a love of photography and the Adirondacks. During hiking season you might run into him on Mt. Marcy or Algonquin Mountain.
At present he is being held in servitude by four cats, lovingly “loaned” to him by his son.
“Agony of the Gods” is his first book.
His novella "And the Last Shall Be First" are available as free reads on his WebSite http://tomwolosz.com
Joseph Carrabis is the author of over a dozen novels and hundreds of short stories, including the Nebula-recommended Cymodoce and the Pushcart nominated The Weight. Raised by his maternal grandfather John, Joseph developed a thirst for knowledge that would motivate him to seek immersion within indigenous societies all over the world. These experiences compelled Joseph to help others and have inspired his writing. In addition to writing fiction, Joseph is the author of internationally best-selling non-fiction. Prior to becoming a full-time author, Joseph sat on several advisory boards including the Center for Multicultural Science and the Journal of Cultural Marketing Strategy. He was a Senior Research Fellow at the Society for New Communications Research, an Annenberg Fellow at the University of Southern California, and served with the UN/NYAS Scientists Without Borders program. Joseph was born in Melrose, MA, and currently lives in Nashua, New Hampshire with his wife, Susan, and their four-legged child, Boo.
blah blah blah.
Personally, I think I'm rather boring and dull. I figured that wouldn't make good copy so I asked a bunch of friends how they'd describe me. Everybody said I was "intriguing". That's a nice double-edged word, don't you think? Kind of like something you want to stare at from a distance or with a good, solid, thick piece of steel reinforced glass between you and whatever you're looking at.
Me, if I think something's intriguing, I want to know more about it but I don't want to get too close while getting to know more about it. Know what I mean?
Next came "multi-dimensional, refined and cerebral" and in that order except for one person who actually used "refined and cerebral" together. Okay. I might get invited to more parties being "multi-dimensional, refined and cerebral" than simply "intriguing". Probably depends on the type of party.
Then came, to me, the good stuff: loves to talk around a campfire, loves to fly kites, finds joy in the simple things, loves to cook for friends, befriends all sorts of wildlife (raccoons, skunk, opossum, deer, turkey, coyote, gray and red fox, hawk, deer, squirrel, chipmunk, finches, robins, snakes, turtles) to the point that they come up and take food from his hand (this one I can verify as can most people who come over to visit us in the evenings), always ready to help his friends and strangers when asked, makes pizza to die for, loves long walks with his wife and dog, ...
One friend wrote "You want to know about Joseph Carrabis? He's a master story-teller with a sharp sense of humor. He's a musician and an extraordinary pizza maker. He flies kites that are so big they would tear my arms off, and he knows the best diners with the best pie in New England. He taught me what real coffee should taste like, and how to really enjoy a good cigar. He can bring forth the joy of a five year old in one moment, and the wisdom of a thousand year old sage the next. He's someone who can help you change how you experience the world, and you'll laugh harder than you thought possible while it's happening. Don't ever buy into his 'I'm boring and dull' line."
I find that flattering (blush). I won't attest to its accuracy, only that I'm flattered by it.
Then there's my professional bio (which, to me, is truly boring and dull): "Joseph Carrabis was Founder and Chief Research Officer of The NextStage Companies and helped clients understand how people think and react to marketing, leveraging that information to improve marketing efforts. He held patents for NextStage’s Evolution Technology, creating a new, disruptive field of technology and applications. Evolution Technology allows any programmable device to understand human thought and respond accordingly.
"He has designed, developed and delivered over 100 tools that analyze everything from group and individual social behaviors to product design and development to community development and monitoring to consumer psychology to resume analysis and improvement to finding compatible life-partners to personal growth to training measurement for governments, businesses and individuals worldwide.
"He was a Senior Research Fellow at the University of Southern California’s Annenberg Center for the Digital Future; is a Senior Research Fellow and Board Advisory Member for the Society for New Communications Research; a Founder, Senior Researcher and Director of Predictive Analytics for the Center for Adaptive Solutions; is an Advisory Board member to the Center for Multicultural Science, Editorial Board member to the Journal of Cultural Marketing Strategy, a member of Scientists Without Borders; has served as Chief Neuroscience Officer, Chief Data Scientist, Chief Scientist and Neuromarketer-in-Residence for a number of companies worldwide.
"Joseph has authored over 25 books, including Reading Virtual Minds Volume I: Science and History, Reading Virtual Minds Volume II: Experience and Expectation, Reading Virtual Minds Volume III: Fair-Exchange and Social Networks, and Tales 'Told Round Celestial Campfires."
So take your pick which of me you like. Just remember that front and back I'm boring and dull. I only seem to be interesting in the middle.
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- Reviewed in the United States on March 20, 2022This collection of attributes to madness delivers unexpected stories. The majority of the nearly thirty globally represented authors featured in this volume were new for me. I found myself mesmerized with the wit and charm of these tales. It is a fictional collection and yet several times I wondered at how close some might be to reality.
Each of the stories entertained me while several called me back to reread or go explore the writer’s other works. Most of the stories began with a kick and pulled me effortlessly to the conclusion, sometimes begging for more. Several had distinctive lines that made me laugh or smile.
In A New Start, by Nicola Foster, the main character Royston the writer has food delivery with substitutes. The insanity of the choices made me chuckle more than once “Oh…Mr Murcon? Food delivery, two substitutes, no cream cheese and chive so it’s quark and no French sticks so you’ve got hot cross buns.”
In Rachel, Above The Clouds, While Flying, by Joseph Carrabis, I was captivated with the exchanges between Benny and Rachel—endearing resolution. The bantering is relatable, “‘Something light’, ha ha. Funny, Raech. You’re so close to the sun you could take a bath in its radiation and you want to hear something light?”
The story In Too Deep, by Dominick Cancilla, was the discussion between Robert and Bob and the story. It reminded me that feedback from a friend can be crazy when they debate the various story threads and breadcrumbs. “It does if Alexandro is crazy and his short story is actually a true story about a real skeleton that he brought to life.”
I recommend this story to those who want to explore a variety of writing talent, delivered in bite-sized pieces. Each story stands on its own merit. Though I honestly did not particularly like a couple of them I enjoyed the quality of the storytelling from start to finish. Some I read more than once. Jumping into the fourth volume had me tagging the other volumes to be read list. The variety is delicious.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 16, 2022Love this anthology... Funny and creative. I look forward to every edition.
Top reviews from other countries
- RobbieReviewed in the United Kingdom on November 11, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars So many short stories
My better half is one of the writers, its a fantastic way to get into print you won't be disappointed