by Allyson Longueira | Jun 28, 2018
In the near future, subdivisions sat dead.
When Dennis Phipps goes to clean out his grandmother’s old home in a dead subdivision, what he finds will change his life.
A short story of a man reliving his past.
Sometimes the old saying about the past should remain in the past rings frighteningly accurate. Especially for Dennis Phipps.
by Allyson Longueira | Sep 15, 2015
Available in:
ebook, $6.99
Trade paperback, $19.99
978-1561466498
Stories from July
Dean Wesley Smith
USA Today bestselling author Dean Wesley Smith decided to take his love for short fiction a step forward. In July of 2015, he wrote thirty-two short stories, one per day and one extra. Then, every day, he also wrote a short article about the writing of the story.
Now the articles and stories combine into this major collection that also works as a master class on the art of storytelling.
Follow a professional writer through a month of creation and enjoy some wonderful fiction at the same time.
by Allyson Longueira | Feb 23, 2014
I Killed the Clockwork Key
Dean Wesley Smith
We are all born and raised with an image of a perfect life, an American Dream illustrated by a simple subdivision street called Bryant Street. But in chasing and holding the American Dream, we often forget why we are in the race.
by Allyson Longueira | Feb 23, 2014
For Your Consideration
Dean Wesley Smith
Sometimes, what we all wish for can happen in the
Twilight Zone. Other times, our wishes come true
on just a simple suburban street.
Caro Rosefield must investigate a very strange
foreclosed home. A nightmare or maybe a new future?
On Bryant Street,
anything seems possible.
And anything can happen.
by Allyson Longueira | Feb 23, 2014
Call Me Unfixable
Dean Wesley Smith
A perfect wife. A perfect home. A not-so-perfect husband. What possibly could go wrong?
As a trial lawyer, Craig could face any situation and make it work. But facing his controlling wife and her lover (while they drank wine in his bed) turned out to need more than just a good plan.
Craig needed to believe in his actions, every action, no matter how small. Or large.