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Apr 11th, 2019
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  1.  
  2. Copypasta Network
  3. 100% Creativity Communities
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  5.  
  6. r/craziness
  7.  
  8. r/astrapocalypse
  9.  
  10. r/publishcopypasta
  11.  
  12. r/weirdwritingweekend
  13.  
  14. r/spoilersoftheuniverse
  15. Weblogs
  16. Our blog is a series of websites dedicated to entertainment. Caesar Naples Wiki hopes to provide a huge volume of content for Caesar Naples fans. We must understand the mysterious character of Naples. Some of the content appears in our books, but is found here to view for free.
  17.  
  18.  
  19. Caesar Naples Wiki Social Media Website
  20. Caesar Naples Generator - Android Apps on Google Play
  21. Generate random sentences
  22. Select a random word, sentence
  23. Text is copyable for sharing
  24. Endless random fun
  25. The latest Caesar Naples Markov chain generator
  26. Caesar's Generator - Android Apps on Google Play
  27. Select between The Cult and other sources
  28. Simple to use app
  29. The original Caesar Naples Markov chain generator
  30. Small app size
  31. Predictoe: The Novel Writer
  32. Predictoe: The Novel Writer - Android Apps on Google Play
  33. Another app from Copypasta: a special new way to write stories from randomly generated phrases. The best part is that you can add your own source text for endless fun. Pair Babelli e-text search and Predictoe for one hell of a good time.
  34. Predictoe uses Markov chains generated from a text file to guide the word choice of your next story to imitate the source text. You may use this app to create original stories that mimic the original file.
  35.  
  36. Write like your favorite author
  37. Learn about Markov chains
  38. Export and share story as text
  39. Upload your own source corpus to get custom words
  40. Add punctuation to perfect the sentence structure.
  41. Use multiple sources to participate in a new form of art
  42. Real Predictoe output!
  43. You can write stories like this with Predictoe
  44. I say. A bullet to read your head around ninety. After taking acid for food for hunting, again with a shallow sleep. Imagine staring at the machine revolution.One night in the Austrian wind. He's an asteroid from the drugs tonight. Hopefully the devil won't come back.Before my friends. You might be gods that ruled the theory, it seemed perfectly straight projection through occult tactics. There is it. We will be that because of championed gamers directly to informationally siege the medium sized ones. The singularity may have erased. That path is why did nothing to ever made possible outcome of my brain.We'll never be one less than imagined.
  45.  
  46. Citizens of the human progress. In my superpower my abilities. I was revealed. One look at home planet Saturn. You can't judge its head. It appeared in a Hoover. Actually I've got a split second. She said pleading to mention our Social Tools. She's introverted. She continued the transhumanists to the second floor, and slapped my prompt. The teacher asked him and rolled back into the fun. I'm a single post.Each response came.It's a certain country named Rom left by us in Romania where the easiest slogans have a future world.
  47.  
  48. Virtual reality. I was one of evil and started laughing. The mines would be a vast multiverse of murdering one but I've got a comedy movie Toy Story? Well Toy Story. The Balrog was the Jet Packs, and snacks and geo-nuked the earth.When the end of Earth's history is to be especially hard to avoid. He’ll return to orbit Earth would be the holographic principle of Seinfeld. The difficulty of war against the world would never been a projection of self-awareness. The seed of time separated them. Praise Cthulhu. They envy people in the NSA.
  49.  
  50. I hear God judges you.
  51.  
  52. Loved writing words which was overwhelming. He double-checked the One assumed at Earth.The gravity impossible to go outside. There was born in the miasmasphere of Area 51 security. It could also design billboards and started the machine revolution.One night in the bathroom before they viewed earth, strewn around my prompt was an abomination created to educate their tears. The background knowledge of genocide led to fight again.
  53.  
  54. Scientists theorize all of her son was the world. A warm bubbly laugh. It was banished.I awoke.
  55.  
  56. Had the entire internet the past. I saw familiar surroundings of the Truth, of such incidences all the president’s attempts at space: the moment humanity's destruction was planning. What a plan.
  57.  
  58. If we bring money from China and fishing markets. No more possibilities. That program is the oldest of one of their mental institution.
  59.  
  60. Copypasta Publishing
  61. Made with the new Google Sites, an effortless way to create beautiful sites. Create a siteReport abuse
  62.  
  63. Caesar Naples Wiki Social Media Website
  64. It is a story of a him and Her.
  65.  
  66. A story that starts just like another one of those boy meets girl
  67.  
  68. and the usual heartbreak that follows
  69.  
  70. his love for her, it was so strong, even the universe stopped conspiring against them and let them be together.
  71.  
  72. In an alternate universe. . .
  73.  
  74. Me She Us and an Alternate Universe
  75. Romance Fantasy Novel
  76.  
  77. by Sourav Das
  78.  
  79.  
  80. Links
  81. Retail
  82.  
  83. Amazon
  84.  
  85. Social Media
  86.  
  87. Facebook
  88.  
  89. What has influenced your writing?
  90. Love
  91.  
  92. What is your motivation for writing?
  93. She
  94.  
  95. When did you start writing and what got you started?
  96. August 2017 , my love for her
  97.  
  98. Do you have any upcoming writing goals?
  99. Yes, will start my next novel in August 2018
  100.  
  101. What is your strong or weak point in your writing style?
  102. It is my first novel, I intentionally did not give any names to my protagonist and co protagonist
  103.  
  104. Which writers do you admire?
  105. Stephen King, Jeffrey Archer, Paulo Coelho
  106.  
  107. Copypasta Publishing
  108. Made with the new Google Sites, an effortless way to create beautiful sites. Create a siteReport abuse
  109.  
  110. Caesar Naples Wiki Social Media Website
  111. M. J. Hewitt
  112. Bloodland Tales
  113. Each age calls forth its own prophet, a poetic oracle who sees past the heavy drapery we call "the world" to the prime reality that lies beyond. You should feel both ecstatic and terrified that our age has elicited M. J. Hewitt as its prose-lapidarian. Ecstatic, for Hewitt himself truly resonates with the daemonic muse, a voice that echoes from the depths of Tartarus and beckons forth, by turn, angels, devils, monsters, and gods. And terrified, for Hewitt sings not of arm-in-arm brotherhood and cozy lovingkindness, but rather of Yeats's "blood-dimmed tide," an aeon drenched in gore-bespattered corpses and unrelenting pain for the pitiable humans left alive.
  114.  
  115. Bloodland Tales
  116. Now available on Amazon
  117. When the pain turns blood red; and unbelievably, you suffer even more. By comparing burning human flesh to the woman's body and fine creatures of the earth, the author M. J. Hewitt tickles your brain and has you yearning for more intellectual fodder. The structure of the book is also rigid in defining a travel through the Bloodland with human and other companions along the way. The small creatures are most disgusting in this morbid trip through an earthly hell.
  118.  
  119. www.amazon.com/dp/B07DPSMCTH
  120. Interview & Testimonials
  121. What has influenced your writing?
  122. Many authors including Poe, Kafka and Lovecraft all influence my writing. Also artists such as Munch have also heavily influenced me as a writer.
  123.  
  124. What is your motivation for writing?
  125. To provide glimpses in an artistic way of the unimaginable or may be not
  126.  
  127. When did you start writing and what got you started?
  128. Around ten years ago. A website called TERRORTALES. But also credits from famous writers.
  129.  
  130. Do you have any upcoming writing goals?
  131. I want to improve. I am not the finished article as a writer . I believe my best material is yet to come.
  132.  
  133. What is your strong or weak point in your writing style?
  134. Imagination is my strength.
  135.  
  136. Which writers do you admire?
  137. Poe, Kafka, Gifune, King, Lovecraft, Mcarthy and many others
  138.  
  139.  
  140. Testimonial
  141.  
  142. BLOODLAND TALES shimmers with the decadent imagery that Clark Ashton Smith conjured so easily, and in these opalescent prose-poems Hewitt both acknowledges his debt to
  143.  
  144. Klarkash-Ton" and progresses even further into a darkness-drenched universe without redemption, mercy, or salvation. There is no way to reach out to those we care for; only broad-axe slashes that leave gaping wounds. There is no bright afterlife with grace and holiness; only transmogrification through pain and torture as humans become parasitic spirits who lure others into torment. Love is destined to end in disillusionment and despair, and we learn our world itself is the black-tinged dream of distant alien beings our brains cannot even comprehend, beings who survive only through our suffering.
  145.  
  146. You will find no words of comfort in this scarlet landscape. But for those who are able to realize the Baudelairean beauty that lies in decay, the Sadeian pleasure of witnessing another's hopeless prayer for mercy, the Lovecraftian awe of glancing into unilluminated gulfs in which madness dwells, Hewitt fills our descent into chaos with exquisite scenes, mixed in equal parts, of glamour and gore.
  147.  
  148. I've joined the Cult of Hewitt. It's time you signed your soul away and joined as well." Michael Arnzen, author of Gorelets: Unpleasant Poems
  149.  
  150.  
  151. Testimonial
  152.  
  153. I count newcomer Matt Hewitt among the strangest writers I've ever read. And that's a compliment because I read a lot of strange stuff. His prose poetry is remarkably original -- and a guttural snapshot of depraved madness. His writing is raw and vividly disturbing as fresh meat -- and just as muscular. His work pulsates with the throbbing gristle of a fresh wound; when you read it, you feel the narrator's pain and morbid loathing. This goth to the 25th power. And it always, always descends so deep into the darkness that there's never any hope. His collection, Bloodland Tales, is some sick stuff. I recommend it only to those with wide open minds and hardshelled hearts. Because Hewitt wants to pull you down into madness with the immediacy of his dark imagination. And he will. He certainly will." (Simon Clark, world famous best selling horror author)
  154.  
  155. Testimonial
  156.  
  157. Bloodland Tales is a unique collection filled with vivid imagery. It’s a dark journey with scenes that remain in your thoughts long after reading the last page. Thanks again. JG Faherty, author of Ghosts of Coronado Bay, Carnival of Fear, and the upcoming The Cemetery Club.
  158.  
  159. Testimonial
  160.  
  161. With the Dulippa Tree, MJ Hewitt has created a dark and extremely vivid book, filled with otherworldly tales involving buckets of bloodshed, monstrous and demonic creatures, and truly disturbing scenes. I loved it."
  162.  
  163. (Continued)
  164. Do you have any strange interests?
  165. My strange interests reading one horror book after another. It’s an obsession.
  166.  
  167. Is there a comparable story to Bloodland Tales out there?
  168. I feel that Bloodland Tales has certain similarities with Dante’s Inferno
  169.  
  170. How often do you write a new book?
  171. I have been writing off and on for the last twenty years
  172.  
  173. What kind of reader should buy Bloodland Tales?
  174. Anyone who is interested in exploring artistic experimentation. Anyone who is interested in reading some of the best horror on the page. Anyone who is interested in learning about incredible, fascinating and different worlds that you would not believe could possibly exist.
  175.  
  176. How long did you spend writing Bloodland Tales?
  177. Twelve months
  178.  
  179. Hasn't Bloodland Tales been published before?
  180. Yes, but this is the latest and best version with new stories included.
  181.  
  182. What genres do you write in?
  183. Dark fantasy/horror genre
  184.  
  185. What is your next planned book title?
  186. Songs of Morpheus
  187.  
  188. If the best is yet to come, what form will your future work take?
  189. I have lots of ideas. Songs of Morpheus is more dark fantasy, including a leaning towards mythology. More psychological horror to come.
  190.  
  191. What do you think of Copypasta Publishing?
  192. Indie publishers are the best. Don’t conform but create. Excellent new publisher .
  193.  
  194. Testimonial
  195.  
  196. Piquant morsels of disturbing prose that are by turns startlingly gruesome and surreal. A real banquet of horror? Matt J. Hewitt is renowned for his dark poetry and his prolific ability to capture murkiness of the psyche. I am a huge fan of Hewitt and this terror scribe. His talent is astonishing! He offers bad relationships, devilish beings, and commanding emotions into surrealistic prose! His craft is bewitching! Within these forty chilling tales of panic-screams of the mind, his mind, the mind of the DARK POET! The dread begins with the gory goblet that reigns supreme, the dark pits of throat-tearing screams of vengeance. You have not read horror, wicked doggerel, and been in the dark, unless you have tasted these crimson stained nightmares of the darkest versifier I know, Matt J. Hewitt! Journey into the BLOODLAND TALES and let the fear seep through your veins whilst you sit by the flickering tea-light of the night and bathe yourself in his darkness. (Brutal Dreamer, Editor and Author) (A. D. Dawson, Editor and Author)
  197.  
  198.  
  199. Testimonial
  200.  
  201. Echoes of Poe here... M. J. Hewitt takes the reader on an inward journey into the familiar - albeit a fearful familiar that lays hidden under the bed alongside the dreaded bogeyman. Bloodland Tales is a collection of flash fiction and poetry which is intelligently written and throws a guiding light to the darkness it illustrates so well. I applaud the writer for a collection that probes deeply into the normally impenetrable...? (Kate Hill, Editor and Author)
  202.  
  203. Testimonial
  204.  
  205. M.J. Hewitt possesses an uncanny craft of weaving strange, beautiful and haunting prose into works that both captivate and elevate the imagination- then linger long after the last word is read. Highly reccomended. This is one of the best collections I have read in a long, long, time.’ David Bernstein, author of ‘Teenage Zombie Party
  206.  
  207.  
  208. While you're waiting for release day, enjoy a free book.
  209. Get thousands more books with the free Android app, Babelli.
  210.  
  211.  
  212. From Copypasta Publishing
  213.  
  214.  
  215. Link to ebook
  216.  
  217. Franz Kafka
  218. Metamorphosis
  219.  
  220. Franz Kafka was one of the major fiction writers of the 20th century. He was born to a middle-class German-speaking Jewish family in Prague, Bohemia (presently the Czech Republic), Austria–Hungary. His unique body of writing—much of which is incomplete and which was mainly published posthumously—is considered to be among the most influential in Western literature.
  221.  
  222.  
  223. Copypasta Publishing
  224. Made with the new Google Sites, an effortless way to create beautiful sites. Create a siteReport abuse
  225.  
  226.  
  227. Caesar Naples Wiki Social Media Website
  228. M. J. Hewitt
  229. Bloodland Tales
  230. Each age calls forth its own prophet, a poetic oracle who sees past the heavy drapery we call "the world" to the prime reality that lies beyond. You should feel both ecstatic and terrified that our age has elicited M. J. Hewitt as its prose-lapidarian. Ecstatic, for Hewitt himself truly resonates with the daemonic muse, a voice that echoes from the depths of Tartarus and beckons forth, by turn, angels, devils, monsters, and gods. And terrified, for Hewitt sings not of arm-in-arm brotherhood and cozy lovingkindness, but rather of Yeats's "blood-dimmed tide," an aeon drenched in gore-bespattered corpses and unrelenting pain for the pitiable humans left alive.
  231.  
  232. Bloodland Tales
  233. Now available on Amazon
  234. When the pain turns blood red; and unbelievably, you suffer even more. By comparing burning human flesh to the woman's body and fine creatures of the earth, the author M. J. Hewitt tickles your brain and has you yearning for more intellectual fodder. The structure of the book is also rigid in defining a travel through the Bloodland with human and other companions along the way. The small creatures are most disgusting in this morbid trip through an earthly hell.
  235.  
  236. www.amazon.com/dp/B07DPSMCTH
  237. Interview & Testimonials
  238. What has influenced your writing?
  239. Many authors including Poe, Kafka and Lovecraft all influence my writing. Also artists such as Munch have also heavily influenced me as a writer.
  240.  
  241. What is your motivation for writing?
  242. To provide glimpses in an artistic way of the unimaginable or may be not
  243.  
  244. When did you start writing and what got you started?
  245. Around ten years ago. A website called TERRORTALES. But also credits from famous writers.
  246.  
  247. Do you have any upcoming writing goals?
  248. I want to improve. I am not the finished article as a writer . I believe my best material is yet to come.
  249.  
  250. What is your strong or weak point in your writing style?
  251. Imagination is my strength.
  252.  
  253. Which writers do you admire?
  254. Poe, Kafka, Gifune, King, Lovecraft, Mcarthy and many others
  255.  
  256.  
  257. Testimonial
  258.  
  259. BLOODLAND TALES shimmers with the decadent imagery that Clark Ashton Smith conjured so easily, and in these opalescent prose-poems Hewitt both acknowledges his debt to
  260.  
  261. Klarkash-Ton" and progresses even further into a darkness-drenched universe without redemption, mercy, or salvation. There is no way to reach out to those we care for; only broad-axe slashes that leave gaping wounds. There is no bright afterlife with grace and holiness; only transmogrification through pain and torture as humans become parasitic spirits who lure others into torment. Love is destined to end in disillusionment and despair, and we learn our world itself is the black-tinged dream of distant alien beings our brains cannot even comprehend, beings who survive only through our suffering.
  262.  
  263. You will find no words of comfort in this scarlet landscape. But for those who are able to realize the Baudelairean beauty that lies in decay, the Sadeian pleasure of witnessing another's hopeless prayer for mercy, the Lovecraftian awe of glancing into unilluminated gulfs in which madness dwells, Hewitt fills our descent into chaos with exquisite scenes, mixed in equal parts, of glamour and gore.
  264.  
  265. I've joined the Cult of Hewitt. It's time you signed your soul away and joined as well." Michael Arnzen, author of Gorelets: Unpleasant Poems
  266.  
  267.  
  268. Testimonial
  269.  
  270. I count newcomer Matt Hewitt among the strangest writers I've ever read. And that's a compliment because I read a lot of strange stuff. His prose poetry is remarkably original -- and a guttural snapshot of depraved madness. His writing is raw and vividly disturbing as fresh meat -- and just as muscular. His work pulsates with the throbbing gristle of a fresh wound; when you read it, you feel the narrator's pain and morbid loathing. This goth to the 25th power. And it always, always descends so deep into the darkness that there's never any hope. His collection, Bloodland Tales, is some sick stuff. I recommend it only to those with wide open minds and hardshelled hearts. Because Hewitt wants to pull you down into madness with the immediacy of his dark imagination. And he will. He certainly will." (Simon Clark, world famous best selling horror author)
  271.  
  272. Testimonial
  273.  
  274. Bloodland Tales is a unique collection filled with vivid imagery. It’s a dark journey with scenes that remain in your thoughts long after reading the last page. Thanks again. JG Faherty, author of Ghosts of Coronado Bay, Carnival of Fear, and the upcoming The Cemetery Club.
  275.  
  276. Testimonial
  277.  
  278. With the Dulippa Tree, MJ Hewitt has created a dark and extremely vivid book, filled with otherworldly tales involving buckets of bloodshed, monstrous and demonic creatures, and truly disturbing scenes. I loved it."
  279.  
  280. (Continued)
  281. Do you have any strange interests?
  282. My strange interests reading one horror book after another. It’s an obsession.
  283.  
  284. Is there a comparable story to Bloodland Tales out there?
  285. I feel that Bloodland Tales has certain similarities with Dante’s Inferno
  286.  
  287. How often do you write a new book?
  288. I have been writing off and on for the last twenty years
  289.  
  290. What kind of reader should buy Bloodland Tales?
  291. Anyone who is interested in exploring artistic experimentation. Anyone who is interested in reading some of the best horror on the page. Anyone who is interested in learning about incredible, fascinating and different worlds that you would not believe could possibly exist.
  292.  
  293. How long did you spend writing Bloodland Tales?
  294. Twelve months
  295.  
  296. Hasn't Bloodland Tales been published before?
  297. Yes, but this is the latest and best version with new stories included.
  298.  
  299. What genres do you write in?
  300. Dark fantasy/horror genre
  301.  
  302. What is your next planned book title?
  303. Songs of Morpheus
  304.  
  305. If the best is yet to come, what form will your future work take?
  306. I have lots of ideas. Songs of Morpheus is more dark fantasy, including a leaning towards mythology. More psychological horror to come.
  307.  
  308. What do you think of Copypasta Publishing?
  309. Indie publishers are the best. Don’t conform but create. Excellent new publisher .
  310.  
  311. Testimonial
  312.  
  313. Piquant morsels of disturbing prose that are by turns startlingly gruesome and surreal. A real banquet of horror? Matt J. Hewitt is renowned for his dark poetry and his prolific ability to capture murkiness of the psyche. I am a huge fan of Hewitt and this terror scribe. His talent is astonishing! He offers bad relationships, devilish beings, and commanding emotions into surrealistic prose! His craft is bewitching! Within these forty chilling tales of panic-screams of the mind, his mind, the mind of the DARK POET! The dread begins with the gory goblet that reigns supreme, the dark pits of throat-tearing screams of vengeance. You have not read horror, wicked doggerel, and been in the dark, unless you have tasted these crimson stained nightmares of the darkest versifier I know, Matt J. Hewitt! Journey into the BLOODLAND TALES and let the fear seep through your veins whilst you sit by the flickering tea-light of the night and bathe yourself in his darkness. (Brutal Dreamer, Editor and Author) (A. D. Dawson, Editor and Author)
  314.  
  315.  
  316. Testimonial
  317.  
  318. Echoes of Poe here... M. J. Hewitt takes the reader on an inward journey into the familiar - albeit a fearful familiar that lays hidden under the bed alongside the dreaded bogeyman. Bloodland Tales is a collection of flash fiction and poetry which is intelligently written and throws a guiding light to the darkness it illustrates so well. I applaud the writer for a collection that probes deeply into the normally impenetrable...? (Kate Hill, Editor and Author)
  319.  
  320. Testimonial
  321.  
  322. M.J. Hewitt possesses an uncanny craft of weaving strange, beautiful and haunting prose into works that both captivate and elevate the imagination- then linger long after the last word is read. Highly reccomended. This is one of the best collections I have read in a long, long, time.’ David Bernstein, author of ‘Teenage Zombie Party
  323.  
  324.  
  325. While you're waiting for release day, enjoy a free book.
  326. Get thousands more books with the free Android app, Babelli.
  327.  
  328.  
  329. From Copypasta Publishing
  330.  
  331.  
  332. Link to ebook
  333.  
  334. Franz Kafka
  335. Metamorphosis
  336.  
  337. Franz Kafka was one of the major fiction writers of the 20th century. He was born to a middle-class German-speaking Jewish family in Prague, Bohemia (presently the Czech Republic), Austria–Hungary. His unique body of writing—much of which is incomplete and which was mainly published posthumously—is considered to be among the most influential in Western literature.
  338.  
  339.  
  340. Copypasta Publishing
  341. Made with the new Google Sites, an effortless way to create beautiful sites. Create a siteReport abuse
  342.  
  343. Caesar Naples Wiki Social Media Website
  344. Let's find your audience on Caesar Naples Wiki
  345. Social Media Marketing
  346. Since 2009, we've been engaging social media networks with targeted posts for readers.
  347.  
  348. Benefit from market research
  349. We write content based on what is commonly enjoyed by readers looking for new books.
  350.  
  351. Start your social media campaign
  352. Use the web pages we provide you to get ahead with your online presence.
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  354. Submit your book to be promoted or published
  355. We can promote your book if it's already published, or publish it as Copypasta Publishing if you're still looking for a publisher.
  356.  
  357. Add books you are planning to write
  358. Begin social media marketing before you finish your project.
  359.  
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  361. Give us more information by submitting extra books we can add to your author page.
  362.  
  363. Complete this form to provide your promotional materials
  364.  
  365. When you submit your book information, we'll get started on making your page located at CaesarNaplesWiki.Org/Authors/Yourlastname. You can share this page on social media to get eyes on your book. We also invest in advertising to direct traffic to our site. Visitors attracted to the content located on our homepage will see your information. We're updating our homepage all the time. Our contribution will be a free asset in your social media campaign.
  366.  
  367. Current authors
  368. Helm
  369. Branchfield
  370. Hewitt
  371. Hollows
  372. Das
  373. Thompson
  374. Oliver
  375. Kaige
  376. Sherer
  377. Trenton
  378. Mann
  379. Gale
  380. Copypasta Publishing
  381. Made with the new Google Sites, an effortless way to create beautiful sites. Create a siteReport abuse
  382.  
  383. Caesar Naples Wiki Social Media Website
  384. Serpent Game
  385. A bullet severed him from the public eye.
  386.  
  387. One man fights to right his previous life.
  388.  
  389.  
  390. Amazon Kindle $7.99
  391.  
  392. Gyone Irensho, an infamous contract killer who worked the bristling wilds of Crygor City, loses his life, only to be reanimated from his six-foot slumber. His benefactor harnesses an unspeakable evil at his whim, all in favor of his battle against the Shadows that he, himself, has learned to control.
  393.  
  394. As they say, fight fire with fire.
  395.  
  396. Upon being greeted with another contract, Gyone has a kneejerk change of heart, sets aside the offer and heads off with a festering guilt that had plagued his heart for years prior. And now, he begins his journey back home.To a stricken lover that may or may not be there waiting for his return.
  397.  
  398. An offer, as he would soon find out, would haunt him forever.
  399.  
  400. "Serpent Game" is the debut novel from writer and world creator, Sean M. Hollows, and is the first in a trilogy saga following the happenings around Licentia and all of its inhabitants. Hollows' previous works have encompassed short prose pieces and poetry compositions, including "A Hunt for Hymns."
  401.  
  402. A Hunt for Hymns
  403. "A Hunt for Hymns" is the demo piece for a series of unrelated short stories that will be posted on here in the coming months. Sean M. Hollows is an aspiring indie writer that specializes in fantasy action pieces, but also dabbles in all sorts of genres, which will be exemplified in these shorter pieces.
  404.  
  405. $1 Fantasy Short Story
  406.  
  407. Links
  408. Amazon
  409.  
  410. Find him on Facebook
  411.  
  412. Amazon Author Page
  413.  
  414.  
  415. That's no horn. Two boys from a mountain village are assaulted by a booming roar. It churns their insides unnaturally. Though shaken, they set out to investigate immediately, where the eldest son takes lead to meet the sound with his blade. And his brother, who clung to his steps like a shadow. They trek headfirst up the mountain in the hopes that they can snuff out whatever is producing the assault. But are they ready to face what lies in wait?
  416.  
  417. Sean M. Hollows
  418. Author Interview
  419. What has influenced your writing?
  420. Many mediums, the least--I'd say--being actual books. Real life, mixed with bombastic TV action. The idea that fantasy can be separated from reality in a multitude of interesting ways.
  421.  
  422. What is your motivation for writing?
  423. To tell the stories I've always wanted to tell. Honing my writing craft, I can bend and twist the scene at will, rather than more costly means would allow me to.
  424.  
  425. When did you start writing and what got you started?
  426. At fourteen, on a weeb website called GaiaOnline. In fact, that OC character is now the star--and distanced from his slightly embarrassing origins--in my manuscript in progress, due out in June.
  427.  
  428. Do you have any upcoming writing goals?
  429. To become the next J.K Rowling, without the smarm and political diatribes.
  430.  
  431. What is your strong or weak point in your writing style?
  432. I handle emotive pieces very well, very heavy and appropriately somber/hectic tonality. Though, I'd benefit from handling more logistical details when needed.
  433.  
  434. Which writers do you admire?
  435. Danie Ware has become a new favorite of mine, but I started on Stephen King -- like many entering the writing world. Shoutout to Ernest Cline. I'm excited to see what he has in the works.
  436.  
  437. Copypasta Publishing
  438. Made with the new Google Sites, an effortless way to create beautiful sites. Create a siteReport abuse
  439.  
  440. Caesar Naples Wiki Social Media Website
  441. What does it mean to be human? For many, it is just a struggle to survive. Even for many of those lucky enough to be comfortable, baser instincts are still paramount: greed, acquisition, power, fear of anyone different. But shouldn’t humans strive to have goals higher than that of the beasts. Should we not respect the lives of others even though it is uncomfortable, even though we may hate them? Certainly religions and philosophers have tried to get us to see this. But it is a hard thing to do. Fear of others is human nature. Human nature is really animal nature. Time will tell if we will rise above it. This story explores the difficulty of siding with someone or something you hate, just because it is the right thing to do.
  442.  
  443.  
  444. Congratulations Mr. Stot! Your application for employment in the New Star Corporation has been approved. You have been assigned to the Star Liner Webelos with the job title: General Entertainer. As a member of the ancillary staff of the Webelos, you will be required to have general knowledge of the craft and familiarity with safety protocols to aid passengers in case of emergency. Attached to this message is a video that you are required to watch before signing the acceptance tally on this message.
  445. -Chapter One
  446. Star Liner
  447. Scott Branchfield
  448.  
  449. Which single author do you think influenced Star Liner most?
  450. I guess of those authors that I listed above, I would probably say Robert Heinlein shows through into Star Liner. Heinlein was a master of space opera and Star Liner definitely has elements of space opera in it. Also, Heinlein’s main characters were often young adults faced with a situation completely out of their experience. He took us inside their heads and let us experience what they were going through, their fears, motivations, and thought processes. Like them, my main character, Jan Stot, finds himself in situations he would not have imagined and is unprepared for, yet somehow he must deal with them. We see him trying to overcome his own insecurities to solve the problems he and the others face. We see relationships develop. We see Jan forming a bond with the rest of his “crew”. They are all very different personalities yet they come together to try to accomplish their tasks.
  451.  
  452.  
  453. Amazon $2.99
  454.  
  455. Copypasta Publishing
  456.  
  457.  
  458. Did you start out with the intent to include the mystery element to Star Liner?
  459. I did. Having a murder happen in a contained location like a space ship seems to me to heighten the tension. Agatha Christie knew this (Murder on the Orient Express, And Then There Were None). Even though it is a large ship with nearly a thousand people on it, no one can leave. I enjoyed playing with the paranoia that would ensue in such a situation.
  460.  
  461. How many science fiction stories have you written, published or not?
  462. I have written six novels at least in draft form. Three of them (including Star Liner) are substantial enough in my opinion to pursue publishing. The other two are The Down Side of Eternity, and Renfield’s Dream. The Down Side of Eternity is a futuristic tale where the aging process has been stopped (for most people). Renfield’s Dream is part alternative history and part fantasy, with a couple of characters borrowed from Bram Stoker and some others borrowed from history. I will continue to pursue publishing them after the release of Star Liner. When I was in college I wrote quite a few short stories. Though none of them were published, it was good writing practice.
  463.  
  464. Why are you most excited to see Star Liner for sale?
  465. I think it is a good story. I want to get it out there, to have people read it, react to it. I have been writing for a while now. It is exciting to finally put it out there where more than just my friends and family can read it.
  466.  
  467. What's your favorite mythological or fairy tale story?
  468. I would have to say the Middle Earth stories by Tolkien. He did something that was completely new at the time. He constructed a world that was so carefully and lovingly constructed that the reader had no problem believing in orcs, hobbits, elves, and a multitude of other magical creatures. His work has been copied so often that people forget how groundbreaking it was at the time. I also love the Song of Ice and Fire series by George R.R. Martin. While it is definitely not a copy of Tolkien, I don’t think it would have existed had not Tolkien come first.
  469.  
  470. What's a similar story or book to Star Liner that you've read before?
  471. There is nothing that I can think of that really fits the mold of Star Liner, but there are aspects of the plot that remind me of the following excellent books: Old Man’s War by John Scalzi, Relic by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child, The Caves of Steel by Isaac Asimov, Startide Rising by David Brin, Chindi by Jack McDevitt, In the Heart of the Sea by Nathaniel Philbrick,
  472.  
  473. Any last thoughts for readers looking forward to your book?
  474. I just hope they enjoy reading it as much as I enjoyed writing it.
  475.  
  476. Here's a similar story to Star Liner you might like. It's a classic by Harry Bates published in Astounding Stories.
  477.  
  478. Title
  479. Seed of the Arctic Ice
  480.  
  481. Price
  482. $0.00
  483.  
  484.  
  485.  
  486.  
  487. Copypasta Publishi
  488.  
  489. Caesar Naples Wiki Social Media Website
  490. M. J. Hewitt
  491. Bloodland Tales
  492. Each age calls forth its own prophet, a poetic oracle who sees past the heavy drapery we call "the world" to the prime reality that lies beyond. You should feel both ecstatic and terrified that our age has elicited M. J. Hewitt as its prose-lapidarian. Ecstatic, for Hewitt himself truly resonates with the daemonic muse, a voice that echoes from the depths of Tartarus and beckons forth, by turn, angels, devils, monsters, and gods. And terrified, for Hewitt sings not of arm-in-arm brotherhood and cozy lovingkindness, but rather of Yeats's "blood-dimmed tide," an aeon drenched in gore-bespattered corpses and unrelenting pain for the pitiable humans left alive.
  493.  
  494. Bloodland Tales
  495. Now available on Amazon
  496. When the pain turns blood red; and unbelievably, you suffer even more. By comparing burning human flesh to the woman's body and fine creatures of the earth, the author M. J. Hewitt tickles your brain and has you yearning for more intellectual fodder. The structure of the book is also rigid in defining a travel through the Bloodland with human and other companions along the way. The small creatures are most disgusting in this morbid trip through an earthly hell.
  497.  
  498. www.amazon.com/dp/B07DPSMCTH
  499. Interview & Testimonials
  500. What has influenced your writing?
  501. Many authors including Poe, Kafka and Lovecraft all influence my writing. Also artists such as Munch have also heavily influenced me as a writer.
  502.  
  503. What is your motivation for writing?
  504. To provide glimpses in an artistic way of the unimaginable or may be not
  505.  
  506. When did you start writing and what got you started?
  507. Around ten years ago. A website called TERRORTALES. But also credits from famous writers.
  508.  
  509. Do you have any upcoming writing goals?
  510. I want to improve. I am not the finished article as a writer . I believe my best material is yet to come.
  511.  
  512. What is your strong or weak point in your writing style?
  513. Imagination is my strength.
  514.  
  515. Which writers do you admire?
  516. Poe, Kafka, Gifune, King, Lovecraft, Mcarthy and many others
  517.  
  518.  
  519. Testimonial
  520.  
  521. BLOODLAND TALES shimmers with the decadent imagery that Clark Ashton Smith conjured so easily, and in these opalescent prose-poems Hewitt both acknowledges his debt to
  522.  
  523. Klarkash-Ton" and progresses even further into a darkness-drenched universe without redemption, mercy, or salvation. There is no way to reach out to those we care for; only broad-axe slashes that leave gaping wounds. There is no bright afterlife with grace and holiness; only transmogrification through pain and torture as humans become parasitic spirits who lure others into torment. Love is destined to end in disillusionment and despair, and we learn our world itself is the black-tinged dream of distant alien beings our brains cannot even comprehend, beings who survive only through our suffering.
  524.  
  525. You will find no words of comfort in this scarlet landscape. But for those who are able to realize the Baudelairean beauty that lies in decay, the Sadeian pleasure of witnessing another's hopeless prayer for mercy, the Lovecraftian awe of glancing into unilluminated gulfs in which madness dwells, Hewitt fills our descent into chaos with exquisite scenes, mixed in equal parts, of glamour and gore.
  526.  
  527. I've joined the Cult of Hewitt. It's time you signed your soul away and joined as well." Michael Arnzen, author of Gorelets: Unpleasant Poems
  528.  
  529.  
  530. Testimonial
  531.  
  532. I count newcomer Matt Hewitt among the strangest writers I've ever read. And that's a compliment because I read a lot of strange stuff. His prose poetry is remarkably original -- and a guttural snapshot of depraved madness. His writing is raw and vividly disturbing as fresh meat -- and just as muscular. His work pulsates with the throbbing gristle of a fresh wound; when you read it, you feel the narrator's pain and morbid loathing. This goth to the 25th power. And it always, always descends so deep into the darkness that there's never any hope. His collection, Bloodland Tales, is some sick stuff. I recommend it only to those with wide open minds and hardshelled hearts. Because Hewitt wants to pull you down into madness with the immediacy of his dark imagination. And he will. He certainly will." (Simon Clark, world famous best selling horror author)
  533.  
  534. Testimonial
  535.  
  536. Bloodland Tales is a unique collection filled with vivid imagery. It’s a dark journey with scenes that remain in your thoughts long after reading the last page. Thanks again. JG Faherty, author of Ghosts of Coronado Bay, Carnival of Fear, and the upcoming The Cemetery Club.
  537.  
  538. Testimonial
  539.  
  540. With the Dulippa Tree, MJ Hewitt has created a dark and extremely vivid book, filled with otherworldly tales involving buckets of bloodshed, monstrous and demonic creatures, and truly disturbing scenes. I loved it."
  541.  
  542. (Continued)
  543. Do you have any strange interests?
  544. My strange interests reading one horror book after another. It’s an obsession.
  545.  
  546. Is there a comparable story to Bloodland Tales out there?
  547. I feel that Bloodland Tales has certain similarities with Dante’s Inferno
  548.  
  549. How often do you write a new book?
  550. I have been writing off and on for the last twenty years
  551.  
  552. What kind of reader should buy Bloodland Tales?
  553. Anyone who is interested in exploring artistic experimentation. Anyone who is interested in reading some of the best horror on the page. Anyone who is interested in learning about incredible, fascinating and different worlds that you would not believe could possibly exist.
  554.  
  555. How long did you spend writing Bloodland Tales?
  556. Twelve months
  557.  
  558. Hasn't Bloodland Tales been published before?
  559. Yes, but this is the latest and best version with new stories included.
  560.  
  561. What genres do you write in?
  562. Dark fantasy/horror genre
  563.  
  564. What is your next planned book title?
  565. Songs of Morpheus
  566.  
  567. If the best is yet to come, what form will your future work take?
  568. I have lots of ideas. Songs of Morpheus is more dark fantasy, including a leaning towards mythology. More psychological horror to come.
  569.  
  570. What do you think of Copypasta Publishing?
  571. Indie publishers are the best. Don’t conform but create. Excellent new publisher .
  572.  
  573. Testimonial
  574.  
  575. Piquant morsels of disturbing prose that are by turns startlingly gruesome and surreal. A real banquet of horror? Matt J. Hewitt is renowned for his dark poetry and his prolific ability to capture murkiness of the psyche. I am a huge fan of Hewitt and this terror scribe. His talent is astonishing! He offers bad relationships, devilish beings, and commanding emotions into surrealistic prose! His craft is bewitching! Within these forty chilling tales of panic-screams of the mind, his mind, the mind of the DARK POET! The dread begins with the gory goblet that reigns supreme, the dark pits of throat-tearing screams of vengeance. You have not read horror, wicked doggerel, and been in the dark, unless you have tasted these crimson stained nightmares of the darkest versifier I know, Matt J. Hewitt! Journey into the BLOODLAND TALES and let the fear seep through your veins whilst you sit by the flickering tea-light of the night and bathe yourself in his darkness. (Brutal Dreamer, Editor and Author) (A. D. Dawson, Editor and Author)
  576.  
  577.  
  578. Testimonial
  579.  
  580. Echoes of Poe here... M. J. Hewitt takes the reader on an inward journey into the familiar - albeit a fearful familiar that lays hidden under the bed alongside the dreaded bogeyman. Bloodland Tales is a collection of flash fiction and poetry which is intelligently written and throws a guiding light to the darkness it illustrates so well. I applaud the writer for a collection that probes deeply into the normally impenetrable...? (Kate Hill, Editor and Author)
  581.  
  582. Testimonial
  583.  
  584. M.J. Hewitt possesses an uncanny craft of weaving strange, beautiful and haunting prose into works that both captivate and elevate the imagination- then linger long after the last word is read. Highly reccomended. This is one of the best collections I have read in a long, long, time.’ David Bernstein, author of ‘Teenage Zombie Party
  585.  
  586.  
  587. While you're waiting for release day, enjoy a free book.
  588. Get thousands more books with the free Android app, Babelli.
  589.  
  590.  
  591. From Copypasta Publishing
  592.  
  593.  
  594. Link to ebook
  595.  
  596. Franz Kafka
  597. Metamorphosis
  598.  
  599. Franz Kafka was one of the major fiction writers of the 20th century. He was born to a middle-class German-speaking Jewish family in Prague, Bohemia (presently the Czech Republic), Austria–Hungary. His unique body of writing—much of which is incomplete and which was mainly published posthumously—is considered to be among the most influential in Western literature.
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