Wednesday, October 14, 2015

The Eternal Undead by David Monette Giveaway, Excerpt & Interview


The Eternal Undead
In the Time of the Dead
Book III    
David Monette

Genre: Horror, Urban Fantasy

Publisher: Severed Press

Date of Publication: October 1, 2015

ISBN:
ASIN:

Number of pages: 280
Word Count: 100,579

Cover Artist: David Monette

Book Description:

They thought they had escaped.

The battle for Washington DC is behind them, and the last remnants of the human race have fled from their undead enemies to a remote Caribbean island where they try to salvage what is left of humanity. But even here, the zombies have come. Led by the architect of the holocaust, an invading army wreaks havoc trying to acquire the one thing that can stop them, and the one thing a small contingent of soldiers knows they must never get. 

Join with Sasha, Terrance, Virgil, and the little girl, Max, in an all or nothing gamble as they fight down the road to either salvation or horrible defeat in the thrilling conclusion of this series.  



Excerpt:
As the day slipped away far off to the west, the darkness of the jungle became a living thing. Knit together by the slow creep of lengthening shadows, it grew by degrees into a massive being, shapeless and black. For nourishment it ate the weak or the unlucky. In return it exhaled moist heat and a cavalcade of sound, the sound of thousands of separate voices, large and small, all coming together to meet the ear in a constant sheet of noise. Those who were responsible for the making of this chaotic ballad were invisible to the naked eye of man. This was so not just because of the darkness, but because most of the performers—the frogs, birds, and insects—were hidden within the surrounding vegetation, frightened of being killed by their neighbors, either eaten, or as was the case with the troop of humans quietly slipping along a trail, flattened under a boot.
For one of the six members of this troop of humans, such an act would have been celebrated with a certain degree of relish. Terrance hated the sound of the jungle at night. There were not many things in his life that he gave away for free, but in his hatred he was quite generous. He hated the bleats, the croaks and hoots, and he hated the creatures that made the noise.  He hated the darkness and the fact that he had to wear a pair of thermal goggles to plumb its depths. He hated the heat, and the plants, and the bugs. He hated the head-to-toe leather suit he wore… and most of all he hated the reason he had to wear the suit, the reason he was out in the jungle at night in the first place. He hated the zombies. Or more accurately, he feared the zombies and he hated them for that fear.
His terror of these beasts was not unfounded. Since the first day of the apocalypse when a host of diabolical necromancers eradicated most of the human population on earth and then raised the dead as zombies, the resulting creatures could, with a single bite, turn any living person into one of them. Terrance had seen it done before. It was not pretty. The resilient leather he wore formed a fairly reliable barrier between a bite and death, so day or night, no matter how hot it was, whenever he or anyone else left the barricades surrounding the city of St George’s on a patrol, they wore the protective clothing. The safety it provided far outweighed the bladders of water they needed to carry or the periodic “cool downs” they had to perform while nestled in the boughs of a tree.
Either way, Terrance hated it all.
In fact, he was so busy nursing his various hatreds that he barely noticed when Danger, the woman on point, suddenly raised her fist head-high and froze.
The fire team immediately came to a stop.
Terrance’s finger slipped from outside the trigger guard of his MP5SD sub-machinegun to curl around the curve of the trigger. The contact made him feel safer, more in control.
Around the task force the sound of the jungle withered and slowly died.
The point person opened her fist, laid the flat palm parallel to the ground, and took a knee.
Seeing this, Lieutenant Burgis, the officer in command, looked back and motioned those behind to follow suit.
They crouched and in the dark waited.
There was something out there.


About the Author:

David Monette was born and raised in the cold rural hinterlands of upstate New York. As a typical kid in a typical community, life for him was pretty... typical. He liked to draw creatures and contraptions but as the second born of four sons, such ability was merely a convenient way of standing out from the crowd. As he inexpertly stumbled through high school, his talent for capturing the images in his head onto paper was noticed and encouraged by both teachers and family members.

Without any other idea of what to do with himself after graduation, besides a vague idea of doing something art oriented, he decided to attend Mohawk Valley Community College where he received his associate's degree in Advertising Design and Production. Acting on excellent advice from his teachers at this institution, he went on to Syracuse University where he learned a great deal about art and eventually wound up with a bachelor's degree in Illustration.

With a disturbingly large amount of student debt and a decent portfolio, he learned what it was to be a starving artist. Namely, he found that artists don't starve; they simply pick up an endless series of part time work to pay the rent while continuing to plug away at their true passion. This was essentially what he did until he received his first illustration job and from that point on, he didn't look back. As an illustrator, his highly detailed fantasy and science fiction work has appeared in many books, magazines, board games, and collectible card games for such varied publishers as Dell Publishing, Wizards of the Coast, and Atlas Games. Initially, he had completed these diverse projects utilizing oil and acrylic paints as well as pen and inks.

As digital technology continued to improve, however, he decided it was time to tackle the arduous task of mastering the computer and eventually figured out a way to adapt his style to a digital format. With this knowledge and experience, he went back to school and received his master's degree in Illustration from the University of Hartford. While there, his instructors reviewed his written work and had strongly suggested that he combine his writing ability with his talent as an illustrator to chart his own path.

And hence, an author was born.

Interview
Where are you from?
I live in Upstate New York. Now, many people assume this means Upstate New York City. It doesn’t. It means the upstate portion of New York State. If you were to look at a map of New York State, where I live would be that little corner way up by the Canadian and Vermont borders. It’s about as far from New York City as you can get and still be in New York State.   
Tell us your latest news?
My latest news is that my newest book, “The Eternal Undead,” has just been released! It is the third and final book of the “In the Time of the Dead” trilogy.
When and why did you begin writing?
I began writing about six or seven years ago. I did so because during that time, I was attending college for my MFA in Illustration and one of my professors there suggested that I pair my writing talents with my skills as an illustrator. I listened to him, and here I am!   
When did you first consider yourself a writer?
I never really thought of that before. Let’s see; I pretty much first considered myself a “writer” the minute I sat down with the intent of writing a novel. I considered myself a “novelist” when it was done. And I considered myself a “published author” when it was published. 
What inspired you to write your first book?
I was inspired to write my first book because I had an idea I thought was good and the crazy sort of confidence it takes to follow through with that idea.
Do you have a specific writing style?
Anyone who writes has their own writing style, their own voice. It is as distinct as their individual personality. If I were to categorize mine, I would have to say it falls on the more liberal use of words end of the spectrum.
How did you come up with the title?
Nothing all that fancy. I knew I wanted something to do with the undead in the title as well as something to indicate the scope of the problem for the survivors of the apocalypse. “The Eternal Undead” felt like the perfect embodiment of that.  
Is there a message in your novel that you want readers to grasp?
That’s up to the readers to figure out.
How much of the book is realistic?
I’d have to say that it’s as realistic as you can get considering it’s about fantasy creatures.
Are experiences based on someone you know, or events in your own life?
No, not at all.
What books have most influenced your life most?
That’s really hard to say. I don’t think there’s any one book that has influenced me the most. The reading of books in general influences me. It all gets mixed up into the pot.
If you had to choose, which writer would you consider a mentor?
I’m not sure. I think that in order to consider someone a mentor you’ve got to know more about them than the work they’ve done or a biography written about them. You’ve got to know them as a person. I don’t really have that many writers that I know well enough to say they are my mentor.
What book are you reading now?
I’m reading “Requiem for a Nun,” by William Faulkner, and “The Crossing,” by Cormac McCarthy.
Are there any new authors that have grasped your interest?
The two authors I just mentioned earlier. I’ve also recently read Neal Stephenson. He’s got some good stuff, as well as Margaret Atwood and some Steinbeck that I hadn’t read before. Oh, and James Agee. I read “A Death in the Family” again. These authors aren’t really “new,” I know, but they’ve grasped my interest.  
What are your current projects?
I’m currently about 11,000 words into a historical fantasy novel that takes place in 1920’s America, the Prohibition Era. So far it’s going good. The research. The research. Anyone who has written a historical novel knows what I mean.
What would you like my readers to know?

Don’t just skim through my books. Read them well. Pay attention to the use of color and symbolism. 









Tour giveaway

1 prize containing all 3 ebooks of the trilogy


1 comment:

  1. You know, I was just thinking, if we were to lose Washington, D.C. to the undead, it might actually be an improvement. I'm just sayin'.

    ReplyDelete