Starting from March up until June I will feature authors attending the UK GLBTQ Meet in Bristol (June 7 & 8, 2014:
http://ukglbtfictionmeet.co.uk/2014-registration/2014-attendees/)
Today author is Jordan Castillo Price: Author and artist Jordan Castillo Price is the owner of JCP Books LLC. She writes paranormal, horror and thriller novels from her isolated and occasionally creepy home in rural Wisconsin. Jordan is best known as the author of the PsyCop series, an unfolding tale of paranormal mystery and suspense starring Victor Bayne, a gay medium who's plagued by ghostly visitations. Also check out her new series, Mnevermind, where memories are made...one client at a time.
Website:
http://psycop.com Jordan Castillo Price is offering a copy of Mnevermind 1, The Persistence of Memory to one commenter on this blog. You can comment on LJ or DW if you have an account (I will send a PM to the winner), if you don't have an account, please leave a comment on DW with a contact email.
Mnevermind 1: The Persistence of Memory by Jordan Castillo Price
Paperback: 194 pages
Publisher: JCP Books (May 17, 2012)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1935540491
ISBN-13: 978-1935540496
Amazon:
Mnevermind 1: The Persistence of MemoryAmazon Kindle:
Mnevermind 1: The Persistence of Memory Every day, Daniel Schroeder breaks his father's heart.
While forgetting your problems won't solve them, it does seem like it would make life a heck of a lot easier. Daniel thought so once. Now he knows better. He and Big Dan have always been close, which makes it all the more difficult to break the daily news: the last five years were nothing like his father remembers.
They're both professionals in the memory field-they even run their own memory palace. So shouldn't they be able to figure out a way to overwrite the persistent false memory that's wreaking havoc on both of their lives? Daniel thought he was holding it together, but the situation seems to be sliding out of control. Now even his own equipment has turned against him, reminding him he hasn't had a date in ages by taunting him with flashes of an elusive man in black that only he can see.
Is it some quirk of the circuitry, or is Daniel headed down the same path to fantasy-land as his old man?
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