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Editorial Reviews

The well-traveled author RM Harrington explores new grounds in the captivating Abomination of Lost Memories: Man, Ghost, and One Crazy-Is-As-Crazy-Does Woman. By blending science fiction and horror, this engaging tail intrigues readers, and keeps them on the edge of their seats. Psychologically charged, it has you contemplating how delicate the psyche is, and how vulnerable we are to things beyond our control. Filled with things that go bump in the night, you never know what might lie around the corner, hidden by the layers of the veil. Is what Harrington’s characters are seeing real, or are the frayed edges of their sanity beginning to tear? – Michael DeAngelo, creator of the Tellest brand of fantasy novels and stories.

 

From the Author

Abomination of Lost Memories began with Kanok as the lead character while engaged in battle with the abomination that invaded his parent’s cave. But time went on, and various beta readers complained about the scene being too long, and not enough followup in the aftermath. I agreed with those suggestions and problems, then a new beginning started by placing JP Anderson into the conflicts of the story. That demanded additional characters, conflicts, and actions.
Thus things grew, expanding more and more into a complex tale of many characters all moving unknown to one-another toward a single collision.

For those reviews who never actually read the story yet called the work a “remake of the Bodysnatchers,” I submit that this tale in no manner resembles that ancient movie. Readers. Don’t be fooled. Abomination starts in the middle of an unknown world. That packs strange and unexplained concepts into the early pages. It takes a bit of work and patience to wrap your mind around all that happens in such a short time. The leeches don’t snatch bodies, they absorb and combine with host bodies, human or other.

Here is my promise to you. Anyone who enjoys a book that stretches beyond the mundane will thrill to the ride presented in this story. Give it a fair try. You will get hooked..

How strange that someone can review a book and compare it to something that it in no manner resembles. Makes me wonder if that reviewer actually read the story or if they are just doing a hatchet job. –This text refers to the paperback edition.

 


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