Got it, thanks. I'll read it through and give you a review.
Thanks Tecumseh!
Don't forget, If you haven't done it already, you can open an account for free, with your email address, then the only way (That I found) to get the book is with a kindle reader or a Kindle app on your IPhone or your PC.
Kindle format is proprietary, and DRM protected so you can't read it on other devices......
It can be read on any tablet PC/Mac Kindle Fire or Android, but you need a Kindle App which is free. The great thing about doing this is that you are then allowed to review the book. Even if you have already read it you can leave me a review if you doiwnload the kindle version. Review really heklp my standings on Amazon, in fact they are paramount. So please do me a solid, we've almost given away 300 books, I want to get a 1000 out today.
MJ PRESTON THE EQUINOX
Dark Discussions Review
The Equinox: When a tribe of native people in the Northwest Territories of Canada are snowed in from the world, they are forced to resort to inhuman ways of survival. When a presence is drawn to their suffering, an evil blankets over their continued existence until a occurrence results in the spread of the terror to more populated lands. With its ensemble cast, the novel takes paths that lead to a serial killer, demonic monsters, and a police department that slowly discovers that there may be something deeper into the crimes that have transpired in their small farming town in Manitoba.
In the 1980’s and 1990’s, Stephen King’s prominence brought about a flood of mass market paperbacks to bookstores, libraries, and supermarket checkout lines. Horror reading had become the fad and anyone who had a manuscript seemed to have their books published. Unfortunately most of them were horrible or mediocre at best and by the end of the 1990’s the horror market completely collapsed leaving only a handful of the early authors having their books published for a mass audience.
Today a handful of great authors are still about including Jonathan Maberry, Gord Rollo, and Brian Keene. Others have dabbled within horror such as Douglas Preston, Michael Crichton, Lincoln Child, and Scott Sigler, but many of their books cross genres into techno-thrillers and science fiction. But for those looking for a throwback to the writings of Stephen King, a new novel from 2011 entitled The Equinox by M.J. Preston was released that brought horror back to its core.
Dark Discussions is joined by the author of this fantastic novel which co-host Philip has stated is one of the top ten horror novels he’s read since 2000. With the novel readily available at such stores as Amazon folks should go out and check their local library or get a copy for themselves.