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Flotsam and Jetsam

    “If you enjoy The Twilight Zone and The Outer Limits you’ll love K.G. Lewis!”—Elijah Hall, editor of The Undead

    Dive into the depths of the uncanny and the unnerving with K.G. Lewis’ new collection of strange tales.

    A father spends years chasing a mysterious funhouse where his son vanished. A man discovers the terrifying reality that humans are considered cattle for an ancient, malevolent race. A trip to the voting booth turns into a nightmarish responsibility when the outcome decides mankind’s apocalyptic fate. In an abandoned radio station, a couple fights for survival against sinister forces that can only be kept at bay by the power of rock-n-roll. A teen girl stumbles upon a supernatural convenience store that offers her a chance to alter her destiny.

    Brace yourself as these unsettling tales and others pull you into a whirlpool of extraordinary and mind-bending macabre.

    Reader praise for K.G. Lewis:
    ★ “This must be a pen name for some other brilliant author. No one writes a first book this good.”—Steve M.
    ★ “Always a delight reading anything of KG Lewis.”—Tethys13
    ★ “Incredibly creative ideas”—Jacob K.
    ★ “The twists kept me guessing, a few even made me laugh, and some of the final images really stuck with me after putting the story down.”—Erica S D

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    About the Author: K.G. Lewis

    Who is KG Lewis? That is a good question. Nobody really knows. All we can say for sure is that KG Lewis is the pen name used by someone or something that writes horror stories. Several people have attempted to track KG Lewis down, only to disappear under bizarre circumstances. Even more bizarre is how characters in the author’s stories resemble people who have disappeared. That’s not the only mystery surrounding the author. Publishers have started speaking out about the strange ways that KG Lewis submits stories for publication. One publisher claimed to be making breakfast and found a story folded up inside a box of cereal, another claimed to have found a story tucked inside one of his shoes, and yet another publisher claimed to have been given a story instead of his check while dining out one evening.

    If you still want to know about KG Lewis, you’ll have to find who or what the author is on your own. But best be careful, though, otherwise you might end up as a character in the author’s next story.



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