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Post by tonyrichards on Jan 22, 2016 16:30:08 GMT
Thanks, Paul. And congrats on the success of your detective thrillers, by the way. Much deserved.
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Post by tonyrichards on Nov 2, 2015 18:52:45 GMT
This collection is now available on Smashwords, with other outlets to follow in the next couple of weeks. Find out more here.
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Post by tonyrichards on Jul 6, 2015 12:07:21 GMT
And thanks to everyone who's downloaded this book so far. It's been pretty popular.
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Post by tonyrichards on Apr 28, 2015 14:08:37 GMT
What lurks in the old coal-cellar under Terry Raker’s home … could it be something from a different world? Why has a schoolboy from decades back suddenly appeared on the streets of modern London? Who are those peculiar teenagers hanging out around the quiet, dark regions of a seaside town? When a blind boy suddenly begins to see streaks of bright color, what exactly does it mean? Is there really the ghost of an insane girl in an old house’s basement … and how’s she planning to get out? What do mirrors become when they cannot reflect anything? If a young person has an imaginary friend … just how real that can friend be?
And in the gray, polluted world of the not too distant future, there is a machine that can still create wonderful vacations for anybody under ten years old … but what happens when that machine goes wrong?
Eight tales of mystery, darkness and imagination, for younger readers and for older ones who still have vivid, open minds. 3 of these stories first appeared in anthologies edited by Richard Davis, and 3 more in collections by Mary Danby.
SPINE CHILLERS is only available on Amazon Kindle at the moment. You can find out more here.
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Post by tonyrichards on Feb 19, 2015 18:39:06 GMT
My pleasure, Rob. Enjoy.
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Post by tonyrichards on Feb 4, 2015 2:52:45 GMT
No offence intended of taken. Sorry to be so slow with my replies, but I'm working on the final draft of a new novel at the moment.
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Post by tonyrichards on Jan 27, 2015 11:42:29 GMT
Thanks as well, Demonik. Hope you enjoy the whole thing ... there's a commentary for each story. Chetwynd-Hayes was a fine editor, and a good writer too, very popular in his heyday, and deserves a bit more recognition.
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Post by tonyrichards on Jan 27, 2015 11:40:24 GMT
It's not exactly my first collection by a long chalk ... I have 4 just with Dark Regions Press. But thanks.
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Post by tonyrichards on Jan 3, 2015 18:39:29 GMT
I try my best, James. Hope that you enjoy these stories, and the accompanying little insights into the horror scene way back then.
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Post by tonyrichards on Jan 2, 2015 14:13:56 GMT
People have been telling me for years how much they remember -- and enjoyed -- my stories for Pan and Fontana Horror and Fontana Ghosts from the early 80s. So now I've put them all together in one collection on Kindle. Each tale has a short introduction about where it came from and what it was like working with the likes of Mary Danby, Herbert van Thal and Ronald Chetwynd-Hayes, and there are a couple of related stories from that period thrown in for good measure. You can find out more about CLASSIC PAN AND FONTANA HORROR here: amzn.to/1Bo6EBj
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