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In a disturbed future, remnants of the human race starve while a new world authority strangles freedom. Abigale - part human, part something else - escapes their control, and combating the militia she begins to uncover her origins, taking her beyond the city walls and into a scorched Earth. With a blend of cyberpunk and science fiction, this dystopian future unearths secrets that other worlds needed forgotten. From Mark Cassell, author of the best-selling The Shadow Fabric. Chaos Halo 1.0: Alpha Beta Gamma Kill is a collection of six stories, including the first episodes of a speculative fiction saga in association with Future Chronicles.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In a disturbed future, remnants of the human race starve while a new world authority strangles freedom. Abigale - part human, part something else - escapes their control, and combating the militia she begins to uncover her origins, taking her beyond the city walls and into a scorched Earth. With a blend of cyberpunk and science fiction, this dystopian future unearths secrets that other worlds needed forgotten. From Mark Cassell, author of the best-selling The Shadow Fabric. Chaos Halo 1.0: Alpha Beta Gamma Kill is a collection of six stories, including the first episodes of a speculative fiction saga in association with Future Chronicles.
Autorenporträt
Mark Cassell lives in a rural part of the UK where he often dreams of dystopian futures, peculiar creatures, and flitting shadows. Primarily a horror writer, his steampunk, dark fantasy, and SF stories have featured in several anthologies and ezines. His best-selling debut novel, The Shadow Fabric, is closely followed by the popular short story collection, Sinister Stitches, and are both only a fraction of an expanding mythos of demons, devices, and deceit. The dystopian sci-fi short story collection, Chaos Halo 1.0: Alpha Beta Gamma Kill, is in association with Future Chronicles Photography where he works closely with their models and cosplayers. His work has been compared with British horror authors such as James Herbert, Clive Barker, Dennis Wheatley, and Brian Lumley. Also, his influences spread over to the US where he admits to having been first inspired by Dean Koontz, Stephen King, Dan Simmons, and H P Lovecraft.