Chewing Rocks (36 page)

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Authors: Alan Black

BOOK: Chewing Rocks
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Sno laughed, “Hey! I am the richest girl on the planet. You know, Sheriff Bob, I might be the richest girl without all of Queene’s money.” She pointed at the crowd lining the compound fence. “I got a lot of friends and family out there.

Sheriff Bob smiled, “Yes, Miss Whyte
, that you do. But the money doesn’t hurt.”

Sno laughed again, “No. It doesn’t. I wonder if Mario’s is open.
Phone Doc Brown for me and ask him to meet me there. I am buying. Say, do you think Mario can handle orders for the whole town?”

 

The End

 

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

 

Connect with the author

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Alan-Black-Paperback-Writer/259372705810

 

Author’s biography

Alan Black has been writing novels since 1997 when he started 'Eye on The Prize'. His writing tastes are as eclectic as his reading preferences. Alan admits that he loves writing much more than editing and the whole publishing process. Marketing of his work leaves him as baffled as the whole string theory thing.

Alan was born in central Kansas, but grew up in Gladstone, Missouri, graduating from Oak Park Senior High School and eventually earned a degree from Longview Community College. He spent most of his adult life in the Kansas City area (with the exception of a few years in the U.S. Air Force), but he and his wife now live in sunny Arizona. He says the dry desert air stimulates his creativity more than the juicy air in Missouri (pronounced here as 'misery').

His desire to write started in the second grade. He was given an assignment to write a short story about Greek mythology. His teacher took the time to call his parents. Although neither his father or his mother remember the incident, it had an impact on him eventually leading him to finally write (and most importantly finish) his first manuscript. It took two years to complete 'Eye on The Prize'. He has gotten faster since then, completing the last manuscript in three weeks.

 

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Other Books By Alan Black

 

Science Fiction

Metal Boxes

Chewing Rocks

Steel Walls and Dirt Drops - available soon

Titanium Texicans - available soon

Larry Goes to Space - available soon

A Planet with No Name - available soon

 

General Fiction

Chasing Harpo

 

With Bernice Black

An Ozark Mountain series

The Friendship Stones (book one)

The Granite Heart (book two) - available soon

The Heav
iest Rock (book three) - available soon

 

Historical Action/Adventure

Eye on the Prize - available soon

 

Non-Fiction

How to Start, Write and Finish Your First Novel - available soon

 

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Praise for other books:

 

Chasing Harpo
by Alan Black

 

Chasing Harpo -
When an orangutan goes on the lam, anything can happen. Chasing Harpo, by Arizona author Alan Black hosts an intriguing cast of quirky characters you'd like to visit with longer. Including the star, Harpo -- an orangutan who believes humans are here purely for his entertainment and, of course, to deliver his food.

A fun ride and a great adventure for all ages, as Harpo and his trusty servant, Carl, try to outwit the zoo security team, the police, the attorney general and a gang of drug dealers.

October 1, 2013 by CITYSunTimes Scottsdale, Arizona by Melanie Tighe at new.CITYSunTime.com

 

Losing Sleep
- Once again, Mr. Black has written a (story) that I could not put down. The characters and storyline are compelling and fresh. Harpo's point of view is well conceived and at times hilarious. Good read, over all. Thank you, Alan Black. Looking forward to your next work!

By Michael Rittermeyer

 

 

Metal Boxes
by Alan Black

 

Thoroughly entertaining -
Found I actually lost track of time when I was reading. Has been awhile since a book has taken me there.

By Mike Proffitt

 

Loved it -
I have not read many Sci.Fi books. I finished the author's other book "Chasing Harpo" and I was so thoroughly entertained by it so much so I had a hard time putting it down. So for this one I was a little skeptical that I could follow along but boy was I wrong. The author has a exceptional way of bringing all the characters to life with a believability so you are able to relate to them. When a author can put you into the storyline like that you know it is gonna be a great ride with all the twists and turns and ups and downs. It is clever, funny and engages you. I definitely look forward to this author’s next book whatever it is!!!!!

By Tammie

 

Great Book! -
Great read. The flow of the book was well thought out and engaging. At times it was like I was there watching it all through Stone’s eyes. Very good read. Would like to see more stories on this character in future books. They’d be worth the read as I couldn’t put this eBook away!

By Brian A.

 

A fun evening -
Highly enjoyable military juvenile coming of age SF. A little gem in the genre and a great night off from heavy reading, recommended as fun, adventurous and leaving you with the pleasant glow of finishing a Flash Gordon arc.

The setting was a little cookie cutter, Mary Sue level a little noticeable but to be expected and things a tad too easy and light on the protagonist, the portrayal of a military force in
an extended combat of attrition and its culture a little light but again within the sub genre all of this is to be expected.

I would read another in the same setting happily.

By Robert Casey

 

 

The Friendship Stones
by Alan Black

 

Growing up in the Ozarks in the 1920s

An engrossing coming of age story set in the Ozark Mountains right after World War I. The heroine, 12-year-old LillieBeth Hazkit, lives with her parents in a two-room rented cabin. Work is scarce in the mountains, and her father, who was gassed in World War I, has to take a job far away at a charcoal burning company and is able to come home only on the weekend. The work does (not help) his damaged lungs

LillieBeth cheerfully does a round of chores that would make a grown man blanch today. She also “harvests” small game for dinner with the family’s 22 rifle. She can go to school in a one-room schoolhouse only once a week because it’s so far from home. She brings the rest of the week’s work home to do there. With her cozy home and her parents she feels rich. After all, doesn’t she have two dresses, one for work and one for Sunday?

From a Sunday sermon she learns that God wants everybody to love all people, even the unlovable ones, so she sets out to befriend an old recluse, Fletcher Hoffman, a man who rode with Quantrill’s Raiders the Civil War and did his share of killing afterwards. He just wants to be left alone.

The story revolves around LillieBeth’s attempts to befriend Hoffman and the (violent) actions of a pair of louts who attack LillieBeth and have enjoyed raping women in the neighborhood for years, destroying their lives and any possibility they could marry. It’s the women’s word against theirs. They always say the women wanted it.

In addition, LillieBeth’s landlady orders them to leave their (rented) cabin so that her son, his wife and his family will have a place to live. This will leave the Hazkit family homeless, and LillieBeth will be forced to leave the only home she has ever known.

LillieBeth’s emotions are becoming more complex as she grows into womanhood. She is confused by her conflicting emotions, wanting to do the right thing—to follow Bible’s injunction to love her neighbors, but she finds it hard to love the men who attacked her and the landlord who is evicting her family.

Black gives us a vivid description of life in the Ozark Mountains in the 1920s. He also gives us believable characters which we can love or hate as the story requires.

Highly recommended. And when you finish reading it, give it to your 12-year-old daughter to read.

By Marilynn Larew (author of ‘The Spider Catchers’)

 

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