Roses From Ishmael

Roses From Ishmael

Author: Janna Hill

Publisher: JHill Ink

Published: 2013-11-19

Total Pages: 9

ISBN-13:

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Torn from the pages of Short Stories & Such. Roses From Ishmael is a short thriller by Janna Hill. The story of a man in love; a grief stricken man. An anguished and tormented soul but tormented by what?


Short Stories & Such

Short Stories & Such

Author: Janna HIll

Publisher:

Published:

Total Pages: 118

ISBN-13:

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An entertaining anthology of short stories, flash fiction and poetry combining popular titles bu Janna Hill with collaboration by Joe Hill. New releases including Savannah Dawn (Unconsecrated Visions) and Hemingway's Beloved, originally published in the Horror Writer's Poetry Showcase, Volume I, along with expanded versions of the original shorts.


Unjustified Favor

Unjustified Favor

Author: Janna Hill

Publisher: JHill Ink

Published: 2017-07-08

Total Pages: 283

ISBN-13:

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Love and supernatural abilities are flourishing as the clan grows larger, but sorrow and malevolence are never far from them. Picking up where book one left off Unjustified Favor continues with the O'Bromley, Turner and Latrull families sorting through secrets, dealing with death and suspended in the supernatural.


Once Upon a Dead Gull

Once Upon a Dead Gull

Author: Janna Hill

Publisher: JHill Ink

Published: 2013-01-31

Total Pages: 22

ISBN-13:

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Everyone dies. It's the morbid curiosity of when and how that makes horror so enticing. Once Upon a Dead Gull is a combined work of short stories and flash fiction. Reviews from the Beta Group: “I count myself lucky to have been included in the small group of beta readers who got a sneak peek at these shorts before the rest of the world. Not in any particular order: Ms. Hill presents a compilation of two flash fiction thrillers with Scary Man Bridge and Telephone Frenzy. The first being a 1000 word (she may have cut it to 999) exposé of a middle aged man who delights in playfully frightening little girls until confronted with his own fable. The latter is a 500 word masterpiece for word count equaling a complete and riveting story of a woman pushed over the edge by a pre-recorded telephone solicitation. Roses From Ishmael is a short tale that begins with a blue collar worker buying flowers and beer on his way home after an apparent spat and concludes with. Oops, don’t want to spoil it. Just know it is deliciously twisted. Odd Man Out is an emotional short told in first person by a young woman/girl with a morbid fondness for cemeteries. Lastly this little book concludes with a poem titled Would You Know Me. One does not have to be a lover of poetry to appreciate the story told in quirky limerick. Best wishes Ms. Hill, I suspect you and Joe will have an international hit on your hands.” L.B January


Ishmael

Ishmael

Author: Mary Elizabeth Braddon

Publisher:

Published: 1884

Total Pages: 344

ISBN-13:

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A tale of rags to riches, love and loss during the reign of Louis Napoleon in France.


The Sharecropper's Son

The Sharecropper's Son

Author: Janna Hill

Publisher: JHill Ink

Published: 2017-06-27

Total Pages: 160

ISBN-13:

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Between the stock market crash, a rich man’s greed and the Navarro County drought an indentured slave is left with few [if any] choices. Jamison Baines Weir is born the son of a sharecropper where hard times and sorrow are a way of life. It is a way of life Jamie never questions until famine and malice force him to leave the dying farm and follow a path that leads to murder and mystery. All eyes were on Wall Street, but truth be told, the market crash paled in comparison to the Navarro County drought. A Form of Free Slavery? Sharecroppers were provided land for farming, shelter for their family, equipment and credit for living expenses until the harvest. The sharecropper provided labor - his only resource. After the harvest they settled up, the landowner received three-fourths of the profit and the sharecropper one fourth. Of course the sharecropper's share went toward paying his credit bill and often he was left owing so he had little choice but to stay on the farm, do it again and try to produce more so he could get out of debt, but debt was always waiting at the end of the row. The Great Depression