Superhero Monster Hunter: The Good FightFrom Emby Press
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Superhero Monster Hunter: The Good FightFrom Emby Press
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It’s out there, hunting in the darkness and no one can stop it. Its tally of victims increases every day the sun rises and when dusk falls, fear pumps through the city’s veins. It’s in the sky above the buildings, stalking the forests of the parks and slithering through the sewers. The situation is dire and hope is dwindling… It’s too fast, too strong and too smart. A sudden flash burns across the night sky and figure appears; somebody like us, but not like us. As quickly as it appeared, the figure is gone, searching for the thing, ready to deliver justice. Hope has returned and smiles crack the corners of mouths, because everybody recognizes a superhero and we all know what comes next. Epic battles will rage, city blocks will be trampled and the Earth will hang in the balance as the ultimate evil is answered by the ultimate good. Who will triumph, nobody knows and the only thing for certain is that they will fight THE GOOD FIGHT!
Superhero Monster Hunter: The Good FightFrom Emby Press- Amazon Sales Rank: #1152528 in eBooks
- Published on: 2015-06-15
- Released on: 2015-06-15
- Format: Kindle eBook
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Most helpful customer reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. It’s a Bird, It’s a Plane, It’s a Superhero Anthology! By Buffy At last, a collection of superhero stories with some originality and style. With over thirty stories, this collection has something for everyone.The Jigarkhwar by D. H. Lewis – A long-lived soldier in India must save a fellow countryman from a sorceress about to eat his liver. Interesting world-building.Nothing to be Gaines by David Bopp – In 1939, a policeman searches for a missing black student with the help of a mysterious flying woman. Clever title.Cold Fingers by Evan Purcell – A superhero fights with another hero to save a little girl from a burning building, but all is not as it seems. Little predictable.Red Fog by Greg Mitchell – A Super Power joins a team of Marines investigating a vampire invasion in Nebraska. Interesting for the nuanced conflict between the Marines and the Super and the vampires and the humans. I’d read the book.Who Reaps Legends by Craig Russette – Ouch! This was a hard story to wade through for several reasons: it’s filled with clichés, it’s overly melodramatic, and it goes on much too long. I couldn’t tell if the dialogue or plot were supposed to be over the top or not.Cat Got Your Tongue by Gary Buettner – I don’t usually care for stories that start in the middle of the action, but this one was excellent for a couple reasons: the “hero” is a former evil witch’s familiar turned humanoid to rectify his past sins (great origin), he has a wise-cracking sidekick (a Jack-o-lantern hanging on his arm!), and a light-hearted touch at the end. Well done.Queen of Demons by Erik De Bie – I think I know this woman. She’s a former superhero named Lady Vengence who worked for an arch-demon in hell but now she’s an empathic, alcoholic bar-owner who can’t keep her nose out of her customer’s business. Nice piece of initial misdirection, too.Chasing the Dragon by Mike Chinn – This is far more than a superhero rescue. This is a tale of revenge and partnership and loss and self-rescue. Cicatrix, a super with living tattoos, comes to rescue Tabella, a super who could draw any object to life (until she was imprisoned by bad guys and had her hands busted) only to discover the truth about Tabella and Cicatrix’s husband.A Good Run by Mark Rivett – This could easily be a novel. Seraph, a retired hero with a human mother and an angel father, helps the city battle an ancient dragon. Unfortunately, a team defending the dragon show up to rescue it and threaten the world. Nicely written and very appropriate title.The Hero Disease by Christopher Nadeau – An insightful look at the superhero in all of us when the world’s last superhero, Vanishing Act, must battle an unbeatable foe.Pirate Ninja vs The Sea Pixies by Eric J. Guignard – Silly but fun. A pirate ninja sworn never to harm man or beast tries to save his fellow pirates from sea pixies (they’re neither men nor beasts) but one of them is also a ninja!Slouching toward Ragnarok by Frank Burns – An interesting mind game tale. A convict tries to make his cellmate, the deadliest killer alive, live up to his name after he causes the death of his wife and becomes a pacifist.In Her Footsteps by Michael Healy – A young immigrant woman, using her mother’s magic pendant without permission, must deal with the consequences when she kills one of the criminals who have taken a neighborhood family hostage. Nice tale of the high cost of being a superhero.Dustboy Cometh by Robert Hart – I worried this charming tale of a nerd with his own jetpack would end up dark. When he stops a late night mall heist stealing from his father’s store with three vacuum cleaners and some hamster balls, I applauded heartily.Meeting the Monster by Shannon Muir – A homeless street urchin with telekinetic powers saves people in her neighborhood from thugs and muggers. The appearance of a yeti-like beast who challenges her to a death match blurs the line between monster and superhero.A Visit to Scarpa, Cleveland Chapter by B. T. Petro – The Superhero and Companion Retirees and Pets Association meets at the Cleveland library to discuss old times and how technology has replaced the need for Professor Map and the Sultan of Scent. It’s not too late for romance, however.Sometimes It’s Better Being a Sidekick by Amanda Williams – I wondered if writing about superheroes was a Men Only club so I’m glad to see Ms. Williams’s piece here. Her young hero is taking the Alpha test even though he believes his power to duplicate himself makes him more of a B-lister (and therefore a sidekick). He encounters explosive slugs, sand vultures, flesh-eating rats, the super-villain who killed his mother, and the terrible truth about the test.What I did This Summer (A 7th Grade Essay by Suzie Sampson) by Jason Andrew – Cute viewpoint of a thirteen-year-old super-heroine trying to avoid publicity and being grounded while “fighting against an extra-dimensional invasion from a parallel universe where a humanoid species evolved from a vicious form of French-speaking velociraptors.”Blue Moon Girl by Alli Gagner – Wow! This one’s a wild ride. It has teen romance, supernatural powers, kidnapping, imprisonment, and rich kids with a secret. What more could you ask for?Troubling Undercurrents by Nick Bryan – This is an interesting concept – a mild-mannered geek with a split personality dons a leather suit when he’s UnderCurrent and goes and beats bad guys bloody. Unfortunately, it’s much too long, possibly because the two of them spend most of the story bickering.Worlds Weary by J. M. Perkins – Nice tale of a dimension-hopping demon hunter who lands on Earth and demonstrates why he’s survived to be the last of his kind.Geremian/Ezekiel: The Truce by Marc Sorondo – Earth’s last hero, ruler of the planet, and its last villain, a demonic agent of chaos, join forces to battle a tentacled invader from another universe. Strong characterizations of a super-hero and a super-villain who have reached unimaginable levels.Aeolus, Chiron, and the Sea Serpents by John A. McColley – A unique super-hero team of true friends in a steam punk world face death when battling with a hydra which is not what it seems. Clever and charming.Katsuo Battles the Waira by David J. Fielding – A bittersweet tale of an aged, homeless former hero making a last stand.Up In the North Slope by DJ Tyrer – A flying hero and his fireball partner come to fight vampires in an isolated Alaskan town. However, they discover more than they bargained for when a giant monster proves to be a potential disaster for them both.Demoneater by T. Eric Bakutis – A very original idea – a hero who must conquer and eat demons to subdue them. An engaging conflict – his brother has been taken over by too many demons and must be vanquished. Too easy a resolution – Grieftaker he rescues from his brother comes to his aid and shows him how to deal with his own internal demons.Tamperproof by Zoe McAuley – Although I worried about a monster-hunting therapist dragging a small boy to a battle with an unearthly creature, I enjoyed this story a great deal. The boy’s sister is missing, but no one remembers she ever existed. The therapist, instead of recommending to the parents that the boy be medicated, explains to him that monsters are eating people, not only their bodies but memories of their existence. She knows this because she herself is “tamperproof” and kept her memories of her husband when he was taken. The boy shows her where his sister disappeared, and – after dissolves the memory-sucker with an acid gun – vows to become a tamperproof warrior when he’s older. Amazingly consistent voice of a ten-year-old.Holding Action by Matthew Baugh – Every couple of stories, I think this the best story in this anthology, but I suspect this one really is the best one. When I finished reading it, I felt as satisfied as if I’d read a good novel. An augmented soldier is released from prison to fight monsters on another Earth. He fights alongside a colorful band (including Hercules!) but when the higher powers decide this new Earth is too far gone, he has to decide what to do. Influencing his decision is this world’s version of his dead wife. Grooge by Derric Miller – Another story from a child’s POV, but much darker. A small boy sees a strange creature whispering words of despair and suicide to his mother. His mother kills herself while trying to drown her son in the bathtub, and he makes a vow to kill the creature when he’s grown.The Falcon – An Outlier Story by Jonathan Ward – A real page-turner, here a police sergeant investigates a murder by an alleged vigilante but discovers her own dark past at St. Vincent’s orphanage for vulnerable children. Who is the Falcon and why does the murderer and thief seem so familiar.For a Fistful of Diamonds – An Outlier Story by A. R. Aston – This story is written in the same world as “The Falcon” and even mentions him. This is a strong story of what happens when absolute power corrupts absolutely. A reluctant flame hero fights Super-Barbie when she decides she can take and kill whomever she wants.The Beast in the Beauty – An Outlier Story by Jams Fadeley – Again, this story written in the same world as Falcon and Fistful describes a set of identical teenage twins with mental powers. One can perform telekinesis and one can read minds. Unfortunately, the TK twin is ridiculed in high school and her darker side (the Beast) takes over. The mind-reading twin, who has protected her more violent sister all her life, takes her place when the police arrive. A couple of government agents arrive to recruit her into a crime-fighting organization, knowing which twin she really is.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Grooge ain't Disney By Mark Allen While this anthology was enjoyable for the most part, I did find many of the stories a tad "light" for my literary tastes, when tend to run the gamut from "dark" to "pitch black." Thankfully, one of the stories--"Grooge," by Derric Miller--brought the darkness in spades. I mean, a mother trying to drown her son and then killing herself instead? A son's vow to hunt down the creature that caused the suicide and exact revenge? Yeah, we're not talking Disney stuff here. The whole collection is only $2.99, but even if you only got "Grooge" for that price, it'd be money well spent.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Five Stars By Bernadette hawkins Best book especially blue moon girl by ally Gagner can't wait for her next one
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