Sometimes it's just better being dead.
Katie Cadora has lived a rather uneventful life with her mother in the suburbs of Chicago. But that will all soon change.
A sinister plan has begun, one that will bring Katie face to face with an evil she never would have dreamed of before. One life-shattering event, and Katie is startled awake to discover her life has been utterly and irrevocably destroyed.
Now she has to try and put the pieces back together again, in a new town, with a new family - and discovers, in the process, that there is something in the darkness that wants her to die.
What would you do if you realized you would be better off dead?
In the first installment of the Witch Gnostic Heresy, Isaac Hunter, author of the paranormal suspense novel - In the Meadow - has brilliantly re-defined what it means to suffer at the hands of a malevolent will, hell bent on using you for their own ends. Hang on for the ride of your life, as you discover in this Paranormal, Suspense series just what it means to wish you were dead. With gut-wrenching twists and brain-blowing turns, you'll be unable to put the book down until the very end.
Join in on this heart pounding, mind searing adventure, get your copy of Our Daughter today!
Check out other great books by Isaac Hunter, like: In the Meadow, and his other new series, the Ashen Monk Chronicles at Isaac's website www.IsaacHuntertheWriter.com.
Chuck Colt, a cowardly and highly neurotic ghost, must find a way to reunite his soul to his newly zombified body before dawn, lest his (un)death becomes permanent.
*****
When Chuck Colt, a neurotic Movie Critic, inexplicably sees his own corpse hanging from a ceiling fan, he comes to the sudden realization that he is somehow a ghost. To make matters worse, his body seems to be moving on its own, and it doesn't like to follow Chuck's instructions.
Now, both Ghost and Zombie Chuck must work together in order to find a cure for their undead curse before sundown, lest they get stuck like that for eternity - if one of the city's weird assortment of characters doesn't get to them first.
The pair must comb through the magical city of New Orleans, facing multiple obstacles along the way - including but not limited to: werepugs, suicidal vampires, and trigger-happy priests - but the biggest obstacle they face is time.
Can Chuck Colt beat the clock to be whole again, or will the Big Easy prove to be too hard to handle?
For what is Tragedy, but Comedy - Time?
TW: Mentions of self-harm, suicide.
Cover by @IAmRodneyVSmith