Man. Minister. Monster.
On the surface,
Reverend Theo Goody appeared to be everything that single mother Keynetha
needed. He was gorgeous, committed to the church, and wasn't fixated on getting
her into bed like her other suitors. Women packed the church every Sunday for a
glimpse at the sexy, mysterious and available preacher, and hope for a shot at
becoming First Lady. Keynetha managed to skate past her competition and begin a
tumultuous relationship of some sort with the Pastor. Sure, he was awkward and
hesitant when it was time to take their relationship to another level, but
Keynetha chalked that up to his lack of experience with women, due to his
dedication to God.
When he takes a sudden
interest in her son, Keynetha is cautious but she's eventually won over by
Reverend Theo's charm, however, this man of God is hiding dark and horrifying
secrets that will rock Keynetha to the core. Will she be blinded by love and
desire, or will she uncover the deadly truth about Theo in time to save her
son? (156 pages)
(WARNING: Contains
adult content and explicit language - for mature audiences only)
Kenya Moss-Dyme is a
writer of fiction, originally from Chicago, now hailing from Michigan - land of
the subzero winters and nuclear summers. She began writing short-form horror in
her teens and won several scholastic writing awards for her creative work. She
later realized a talent for also writing thrillers and erotic novellas.
"The only genres
in which I don't feel comfortable writing are comedy and romance. Whenever I
try to write a romantic story, it ends up turning dark and the couple will go
from taking marriage vows to going on a crime spree! So I tend to stay away
from those genres altogether."
Kenya has several
exciting projects in development for 2014, including a novel about an urban
zombie apocalypse, a horror anthology and a few stories that are a bit on the
risqué side.
"I love zombies and
the supernatural! But there's nothing scarier to me than HUMANS and the
unimaginable depths of depravity of which we are capable. You see it in the
news every day and you ask yourself, 'what kind of monster...?' That's what I
love to explore in my writing, characters that are like the people you think
you know - but you really don't know after all. I create them - and then I like
to set them free - does that sound a little strange?"
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