The Dreadedin Chronicles: The Nameless City giveaway was a success! I set up a Freebooksy advertisement for the first day of the giveaway and harnessed the awesome power of social media to coast to a grand total of 1,043 copies given away. Broken down, here are the figures:
Friday, October 28: 869 (Day of Freebooksy advertisement)
Saturday, October 29: 95
Sunday, October 30: 42
Monday, October 31: 37
Here’s a screenshot of the Amazon sales ranking (keeping in mind that I didn’t actually sell any, but gave them away):

Overall, that’s not so bad. I attribute it to the new cover, the help from my awesome buddies in the world of social media, and the fact that people will download all kinds of books only because they’re free.
In other, related news, I have received all rights to my book The Ultimate Guide to Surviving a Zombie Apocalypse. The publisher has taken the product off of Amazon and will sell its remaining stock. What this means is that I can republish the book under my own imprint. I have new content for it and have already contracted with an artist for more illustrations to go with the new content. Next steps include laying out the book in a new print format and getting it ready to be sold again. So I have three options:
- Lay out the book myself with a tool that will do the job properly. This will require money, time, and effort.
- Pay someone to lay the book out. This will require a great deal of money.
- Give up on it. This requires no money, no time, and no effort.
Obviously, 3 is not ideal. Nor are 1 or 2. So we’ll see.
Also, here’s a picture of my little boy and I ready for Halloween. He went as the blue Power Ranger. I was the dorky guy in an ill-fitting mask.


The choice to make much of Casey’s attempted exorcism occur off-camera makes sense, because the thrust of the show isn’t the effect of demonic possession on a single family, but a larger demonic plot involving the Pope. This, of course, takes us
I had the episode spoiled for me days before I watched it, but I’m not bitter: many of my social media buddies are horror fans, and people can’t help but talk about things like that. For me, the episode was an unrelieved, 42-minute-long exercise in brutality, with crying and sobbing thrown in to season the stew. Kind of like one of the
Jason at
As the show
The comic relief of the Movable Deceased couple was a little jarring, but the later conversation with Marcus in the trailer revealed a lot when it comes to the show’s theme. When Cherry Rego says to Marcus, “A priest with a gun,” Marcus comes back with, “An exorcist with a gun.” Lacking context, this might be a veiled reference to Marcus’s excommunication, but that’s not the case here: the show is creating a distinct difference between the role of a priest and the role of an exorcist, and it’s only because Marcus has left the clergy of the Catholic Church that he can answer his true calling as an exorcist. He’s no Father Karras, let alone a Father Merrin. He’s not even a priest anymore, but that’s a good thing, because the Catholic Church is “compromised,” a fact confirmed by the Abbess.
Episode 2
Sibling rivalry was the other big theme of this episode, though it’s hard to take it seriously when the show has given us so little reason to care about what happens to Casey or Kat. Casey’s change from nice girl to malicious possessed doesn’t work: we didn’t see her enough in the beginning for the transformation to evoke much pathos. Between her breaking the other girl’s leg in the previous episode and going completely crazy on the train molester in this episode, she comes off more like