HOLE IN THE HEAD short story collection unleashed!

 

Alex Hartwell is back, baby!

This new short story collection features three nasty stories I've written over the past couple years.  I know it's been a long wait, but finally I felt good to release this bad boy.  The stories included are "Running Dry", "The Dead Hear Nothing", and "Hole in the Head".  

Best of all, it's only $0.99! It's been scaring up quite a few downloads so far, and I couldn't be happier.

Here's the product description on Amazon:


"My dear, I have something you simply MUST see -- "

Unleash your fear and immerse yourself in Hole in the Head, the anticipated new collection by Alex Hartwell containing three never-before-seen horror stories.

Feel the scorching desert heat and sense the primal terror of "Running Dry," where a band's first tour turns into a nightmarish struggle for survival against a horde of animalistic hunters. There's no escape, but their one redemption just might lurk in a stranger's deadly secrets.

In "The Dead Hear Nothing," a desperate man convinces a grieving father to unearth his daughter's remains. Unexplained deaths have rattled the small town, and the only apparent salvation is to drive a wooden stake through her heart.

Finally, in "Hole in the Head", two women find themselves held captive by a psychotic would-be doctor and his gruesome agenda. Will they triumph over his sadistic game, or will their minds become mere vessels of horror?

Make no mistake, these stories aren't for the squeamish.

Still interested? By all means, proceed.

But don't say I didn't warn you . . .

HOLE IN THE HEAD is the seventh book in Hartwell's Horrors, a series of horror collections sure to provide a few sleepless nights to even the most staunch horror fans.


Don't worry, there's more on the way.  This time, it won't take years, I promise. 

And how about that creepy cover art courtesy of our AI overlords?  Speaking of robots, I was at the grocery store the other day and they have an honest-to-goodness robot working there.  It's not humanoid, it resembles more like a standing tower fan, but it moves on its own and scans the shelves for stocking purposes.  I even stood in front of it to see what it would do, and it stops, makes a little baby noise, and then slowly travels around me and continues its work.

Welcome to the future, folks . . . 

I hope you all dig HOLE IN THE HEAD as much as I dug writing it.  

Enjoy the nightmares!


-- Alex

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