Showing posts with label books about pandemics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books about pandemics. Show all posts

Thursday, 24 September 2020

The Visitor is knocking on your door.....

 

New Book Time 😀

~*~


The Visitor is now live!  
Find it on Amazon HERE (universal link).

 


In 2024, a mystery virus ravages the entire world.  'Bat Fever' is highly contagious and a hundred per cent lethal. 

A cottage tucked away in an isolated Norfolk village seems like the ideal place to sit out a catastrophic pandemic, but some residents of Hincham resent the arrival of Jack, Sarah and their friends, while others want to know too much about them.

What the villagers don't know is that beneath Sarah's cottage is a fully-stocked, luxury survival bunker.  A post-apocalyptic 'des res'.   

Hincham isolates itself from the rest of the country, but the deaths continue―and not from the virus.  There's a killer on the loose, but is it a member of the much depleted community, or someone from outside?  As the body count rises, paranoia sets in; friend suspects friend, and everyone suspects the newcomers.

Most terrifying of all is that no one knows who's next on the list...

The Visitor is Terry Tyler's twenty-second Amazon publication, and is set in the same world as her Project Renova series, while being a completely separate, stand-alone novel.  




Monday, 4 May 2020

TIPPING POINT is FREE! #TuesdayBookBlog



TIPPING POINT is FREE!
May 5th ~ 9th only
Book #1 of my post-apocalyptic series
Click HERE for all Amazon sites



     The other day I was talking to a friend about how viruses spread, because he was unsure why, in this current climate, items bought from a local shop should be wiped with a disinfectant, or why it mattered that under some circumstances people aren't bothering about social distancing.  
     Later, it occurred to me afterwards that I should have just sent him this short excerpt from Tipping Point, about how Nick, my Patient Zero, became 'a one-man fever dispenser' ~ here, in case you would like to read, or pass on to anyone else who doesn't understand!
   I must point out that my 'bat fever' (I wrote this in 2017, honest!) is 100% fatal and is airborne (for very short distances and time periods only), but the principle is roughly the same.
😷😷😷
     
     Nick Greenaway would not start to feel ill until the next morning, though the virus was at its most contagious in that first twenty-four hours of infection.  At the gym he enjoyed a full upper body workout, whooping when he exceeded his personal best on the running machine, oblivious to the pathogens released as he puffed and sweated into the air.  The owner of the gym had packed in as many machines as he could; so close together were they that the bare arms on either side of Nick were soon spotted with tiny molecules of his perspiration.  On his left was a doctor who'd received the vaccination several days before; on his right, a hairdresser called Annika had not.
     
     The next day, Annika would board a plane for her annual holiday in the sun with her girlfriends, feeling a little ill but not considering, even for a moment, that a slight summer cold should stop her enjoying her two weeks in Turkey.

     The woman who served her airport Costa Coffee would feel a strange shudder of darkness as Annika put money into her hand, but choose to ignore it.  She was to remember that sensation the following Thursday, as she gasped her final breath.

     Twenty-eight hours later, when Annika stepped onto the Turkish tarmac, twenty-seven people would be infected on that plane alone.

     Back at the gym that Sunday, Nick sat in the steam room after his workout, to relax his muscles and empty his pores of a week's impurities.  He removed the towel from his neck and placed it on the bench before closing his eyes and leaning his head back.  Next to him, an acquaintance called Wayne picked it up to wipe the sweat from his brow, before realising he'd taken the wrong one.

     "Sorry, mate, I just used your towel by mistake," said Wayne.

     "No worries," said Nick, even though it irritated the hell out of him; Nick was fanatical about personal hygiene.

     During the next twenty-four hours, the two men would be responsible for the exponential growth of the virus in South London.

     When Wayne left the gym an hour or so later, he lit a cigarette and threw it on the pavement half-smoked, where it was swooped upon by a vagrant once called Reverend William Sallis (he had long forgotten about the 'Reverend' bit), who didn't care that the end was coated with another man's saliva.  Later, Sallis would drink from a bottle of White Lightning cider and pass it around his friends.  Later still, during a visit to hospital after a drunken collision with a passing car, molecules of mucus from his sneeze would land on his doctor, an hour before she clocked off for two hours of passion with her married lover.

     A woman jammed up against the married lover in the underground rush hour crush the next morning delivered the first recorded case of bat fever to North Yorkshire, while a young man called Akio Ishikawa took two presents back to his family in Kyoto; the other was a working model of the London Eye.

     As for Nick Greenaway, he coughed while the assistant in the flower shop wrapped the very tasteful bunch of irises for his sister, lifting his hand to his mouth a moment too late and signing the death warrant for the poor florist (whose vaccination date was the very next day).

     As the deadly micro-organisms in his body multiplied, Nick became a one-man fever dispenser.  At lunch time, he passed the virus first to the barman, then to a couple he squeezed past as he juggled three pints back to his table, then to his friend Greg (Aaron happened to be naturally immune, though he would die a violent death the following year in a fight over three litres of bottled water), and, later, he and his girlfriend had sex for the last time in either of their lives.

     Of the seventy million people in the UK in 2024, the majority were yet to be vaccinated against bat fever.  Across the world, many heads of state, members of parliament and congress, a few local and national government officials, royal families, heads of global corporations, members of certain aristocracies and the military had received their shot before vaccination programmes commenced, as had a very small number of scientists, doctors and technicians from selected industries.  Some, like Aaron, would be immune.

     But not very many.
😷😷😷

FYI, an excellent list that explains all types of transmission: HERE

TIPPING POINT: FREE!
May 5th ~ 9th only
Click HERE for all Amazon sites
 

Thursday, 29 March 2018

UK2 is live! #NewRelease #Dystopian #FridayReads


UK2


Find it on Amazon and on Goodreads.

(Books #1 & 2 on special offer for one week ~ see below)




Tipping Point , Book #1, is now at the permanently low price of 99p (Amazon UK)



 Lindisfarne, Book #2, is on sale at 99p/99c 
from March 31st ~ April 6th



UK2

'Two decades of social media had prepared them well for UK2.' 

The pace steps up in this final instalment of the Project Renova trilogy, as the survivors' way of life comes under threat.

Two years after the viral outbreak, representatives from UK Central arrive at Lindisfarne to tell the islanders about the shiny new city being created down south.  UK2 governor Verlander's plan is simple: all independent communities are to be dissolved, their inhabitants to reside in approved colonies.  Alas, those who relocate soon suspect that the promises of a bright tomorrow are nothing but smoke and mirrors, as great opportunities turn into broken dreams, and dangerous journeys provide the only hope of freedom.

Meanwhile, far away in the southern hemisphere, a new terror is gathering momentum...

'I walked through that grey afternoon, past fields that nobody had tended for nearly three years, past broken down, rusty old vehicles, buildings with smashed windows.  I was walking alone at the end of the world, but I was a happy man.  I was free, at last.'

***

Although this is the promised end of the trilogy, I haven't finished with all these characters and this world yet.  There will be more!  There are some side stories I want to write, and I'm planning another novel set far into the future, too.
  





Wednesday, 14 June 2017

Tipping Point: coming your way on August 7th!



"I didn't know danger was floating behind us on the breeze as we walked along the beach, seeping in through the windows of our picture postcard life."

 Tipping Point ~ out 7th August
Click here to see it on Goodreads



  The facts:
  • Genre: Post apocalyptic, family drama, romantic relationships, dystopian, with a background thread of government conspiracy.  As with all my novels, it's very much a character-driven book.
  • Length: Around 90K words, ie, roughly the same length as The Devil You Know but shorter than The House of York, and Kings and Queens and Last Child.
  • Setting: The fictional Norfolk seaside town of Shipden (based on Cromer), and a fictional village in Tyne and Wear, Elmfield (loosely based on Monkton Village, near Jarrow).
  • Main Characters: 34 year old Vicky Keating and her 16 year-old daughter, Lottie.  Her long-term partner, Dex.  Friends Kara and Phil, and Heath and his teenage son, Jackson.

The blurb
The year is 2024.  A new social networking site bursts onto the scene.  Private Life promises total privacy, with freebies and financial incentives for all.  Across the world, a record number of users sign up. 

A deadly virus is discovered in a little known African province, and it's spreading—fast.  The UK announces a countrywide vaccination programme.  Members of undercover group Unicorn believe that the disease is man-made, and the public are being fed lies driven by a vast conspiracy.

Vicky Keating's boyfriend, Dex, is working for Unicorn over two hundred miles away when the first UK outbreak of the virus is detected in her hometown of Shipden, on the Norfolk coast.  The town is quarantined under military lockdown, and, despite official 'no need to panic' claims, within days the virus is out of control.

In London, government employee Travis is working on a bulk data analysis project when he begins to question its purpose, while in Newcastle there are scores to be settled...

Sequel Lindisfarne is set on the island of the same name (click link for pictures) and will be out in September.  An outtake short story collection, Patient Zero, is planned for around Christmas, with Book 3 out in mid 2018.