Contents
The Gutenberg Rubric ©2011 2014 Nathan Everett, Elder Road Books, ISBN 978-1-939275-94-3
AUTHOR’S NOTE
The Gutenberg Rubric is available as an eBook on both Amazon and Barnes and Noble. However, I also offer it here in this online reading format. If you enjoy this book, please consider contributing to the author, either as a member of the Nathan Everett Community on Patreon or by making a donation on Paypal. Your support keeps me writing and is greatly appreciated!
Copyright ©2012 2018 by Nathan Everett
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work should be submitted via e-mail to ElderRoadBooks@outlook.com.
Online serialized edition
ISBN 978-1-939275-94-3
Other eBook and print editions available at The Gutenberg Rubric.
Other Titles by Nathan Everett
Gee Evars wandered into Rosebud Falls on Independence Day just in time to rescue a toddler from the rushing torrent of the Rose River. And to lose his memory. In an attempt to make Rosebud Falls his home, Gee becomes a local hero and inadvertently leads a revolt that changes the balance of power in the town. But will he ever know who he really is?
Computer forensics detective Dag Hamar is pulled from behind the safety of his computer and takes to the streets when he discovers a link between an online predator and real life kidnappings around Seattle. His fledgling romance is threatened when his girlfriend’s daughter is suddenly among the missing.
Computer forensics detectives Dag Hamar and Deb Riley discover secret files and hidden code can be as dangerous as dark alleys and flying bullets as they track a missing man and the billion-dollar fortune that went with him. Fourteen years after For Money or Mayhem.
Journey inside the head of a chronically homeless man. In a less politically correct time, he might have been called a hobo. But what keeps him wandering, hitching rides, and eating handouts? Piece together the story through his memories to find what made him volunteer.
Steven has always known he was a dragonslayer, but on the day his village sends him to slay the fearsome beast he realizes he doesn’t know what a dragon looks like, where it lives, or how to kill it. His quest is facilitated by the exchange of “once-upon-a-times” with the people he meets on the endless road. Think Grimm. For young adults, not children.
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