Title: the 400 lb. gorilla
Author: D C Farmer
Series: The Hipposync Archives
Genre: Contemporary, Urban Fantasy
Publisher: Spence City
Release Date: June 24 2014
Edition/Formats it will be available in: eBook & Print
Blurb/Synopsis:
Matt Danmor thinks he's lucky. Not many
people survive a near death accident with nothing more than a bout of amnesia,
a touch of clumsiness and the conviction that the technician who did the MRI had
grey skin and hooves. Still, it takes time to recover from trauma like that,
especially when the girl who was in the accident with you disappears into thin
air. Especially when the shrinks keep telling you she's just a figment of your
imagination. So when the girl turns up
months later looking ravishing, and wanting to carry on where they left off,
Matt's troubled life starts looking up.
But he hasn't bargained for the baggage that comes with Silvy, like the
fact she isn't really an English language student, or even a girl. Underneath
her traffic stopping exterior is something else altogether, something involving
raving fanatics bent on human sacrifice, dimensionally challenged baked bean
tins, a vulture with a penchant for profanity, and a security agent for the Dept of Fimmigration (that's Fae
immigration for those of you not in the know) called Kylah
with the most amazing gold-flecked eyes.
Book Links:
Amazon UK
Amazon US
Barnes and Noble
Book Depository
YouTube
Amazon UK
Amazon US
Barnes and Noble
Book Depository
YouTube
Excerpt:
Closed head trauma is about as much fun as nude paintballing. There is nothing remotely enjoyable about your brain being bounced around inside your skull like a Ping-Pong ball in a goldfish bowl. And since normal grey matter has the consistency of a chilled egg pudding, the outcome is seldom positive. Damage can range from a very nasty headache to a borg-like half-life, totally dependant on technology to feed and breathe. With luck, it’s possible to recover with nothing more than a touch of memory loss, which in itself may not always be such a bad thing. After all, sometimes it’s a blessing not to remember every detail of the day your life gets thrown into a blender.
Closed head trauma is about as much fun as nude paintballing. There is nothing remotely enjoyable about your brain being bounced around inside your skull like a Ping-Pong ball in a goldfish bowl. And since normal grey matter has the consistency of a chilled egg pudding, the outcome is seldom positive. Damage can range from a very nasty headache to a borg-like half-life, totally dependant on technology to feed and breathe. With luck, it’s possible to recover with nothing more than a touch of memory loss, which in itself may not always be such a bad thing. After all, sometimes it’s a blessing not to remember every detail of the day your life gets thrown into a blender.
Matt Danmor was a blender survivor.
Because he couldn’t remember the few
moments leading up to the accident, they’d diagnosed a smidgen of retrograde
amnesia. And since the details of what happened after the car left the road
were pretty sketchy, too, they slapped on the label of posttraumatic memory
loss for no extra charge.
In truth, it was all a bit of a blur.
Matt’s recovery was slow and inconsistent. Even months afterwards, as his
bruised mind repaired itself so that the picture became less like a
half-finished jigsaw puzzle and more like a stuttering magic lantern show,
certain stark recollections would return with a vengeance to wake him sweating,
pulse pounding, in the dark watches of the night. Sensations like the juddering
thump of the car turning over twice, or the sharp metallic odour of petrol
soaking slowly into his trousers, or the sickly rose bouquet of the air freshener
leaching all over his upside-down forehead, or the pitiful relief he’d felt
when the fireman wielding the Jaws of Life finally cut through the screeching
metal to grab Matt before he passed out.
He’d regained consciousness at the
hospital. There, the thing that stood out like a Klingon in a bikini, the one
abiding memory he had of those first couple of hours as they tried to work out
which parts of him weren’t broken, was his MRI scan.
He’d mumbled half-conscious responses to
their questions about him having any metal in his body (“Are you absolutely
certain, Mathew?”) as they whipped off his watch and his festival armbands and
his Celtic cross pendant. Then they’d slid him into the machine’s cylinder and
started the buzzing, metronomic scan. Matt had been woozy and sick, though
mercifully free of pain, thanks to whatever it was they’d shot into him.
Confused, he’d started to believe that they were burying him alive to the sound
of Burke and Hare playing the bongos on his sarcophagus, but had clung on to reason
just long enough not to make an arse of himself by screaming to be let out.
Yet it wasn’t the scan itself that was the
issue; after all, who in their right minds would object to having the protons
of their body’s water molecules tweaked into different eigenstates so long as
it revealed all the broken bits? No, it was what happened immediately
afterwards that had threatened his sanity.
When it was over, the mechanized table
slowly eased him out, and someone took his hand and asked him if he was okay. He’d
mumbled a grateful “Yes,” and looked up into a pair of kind, green, female eyes
in a quite attractive, dusky-grey face. Quite apart from her unusual
complexion, there were two things about this woman that stood out. The first
was that she wore the strangest-looking diaphanous green robes, which flowed
about her like mist. The second was that her feet went clip-clop on the
hospital tiles when she walked.
Matt had squinted down and been reassured
by what he saw, in a half-conscious, altered-state kind of way. After all, if
he had a pair of woolly legs and hooves for feet, he’d be doing the
two-empty-coconut-shell-tango when he moved, too. It was only later that he
would put his decision not to scream down to the confusion brought on by his
parlous, opiate-dulled, posttraumatic state.
“Just rest,” said the woman in a soft
Scottish accent. He struggled for a woozy label. Was she a radiographer? A
goat-nurse?
But he’d taken her advice and shut his
eyes, deciding that the presence of a genetic hybrid in the X-ray suite of a
busy NHS hospital was not something he need concern himself with at that
particular moment. He simply stored it away as something he would think about
later, when he didn’t have to worry about whether he was going to live or die.
He must have drifted off, because when he next opened his eyes, he was in a
hospital bed with his leg in traction, his right arm in a sling, and his watch
and necklace back on (the armbands, he later learned, were considered too much
of an infection risk and incinerated).
Of course, when the hours and days and
weeks of “later” arrived, so that Matt did think about his clip-clopping
Florence Nightingale, he decided to keep his own counsel. He filed the goat
lady away in the mental drawer labelled side effects: ignore. After all,
opiates were a wonderful thing when you were all banged up, but they did have a
bit of a reputation for inducing the odd hallucination. Besides, Matt had other
sea creatures to barbecue-like learning to walk again and wipe his ass with his
left hand (not necessarily at the same time).
Memory of the goat lady didn’t fade,
exactly, but the inclination to tell anyone about it did, because Matt had
absolutely no desire to see some smart arse trying to keep a straight face
while saying “You’re kidding,” or, “Must have been your nanny.”
It was there in the quiet moments, though,
always ready to come to the surface, challenging Matt to find an answer to it
all. Not that there were any answers to find. Not then.
~ * ~
Author Information:
Once a successful doctor of medicine, DC
Farmer now works two days a week for the NHS and, thanks to the wonders of
Krudian physics, the other nine days a week for Hipposync Enterprises as a
scribe. His role in documenting the work of the Fimmigration Service (as in Fae
immigration), has led to the realization that the world needs to know.
Moreover, if he doesn’t tell someone soon he is going to burst. Within these
pages you will find actual accounts of the splendid work of the Fimmigration
Service, beginning with The 400 lb Gorilla–a sample of which is also on this
site, and which will soon be published in its totality by Spence City books,
once appropriate clearance from the ‘authorities’ has been obtained.
DC Farmer is alive and well in darkest West
Wales, UK.
Author Links:
Facebook Page
Goodreads
Twitter
Website
Facebook Page
Goodreads
Website
Elizabeth, a thousand thanks for hosting. I appreciate it. Amazon.co.uk are playing silly buggers with pre-orders (amd I'm not even with Hachette). if anyone wants to, just add to the wishlist.
ReplyDeleteCheers,
DCF
It was my pleasure, D.C. Amazon can be a pain sometimes. Congrats on your upcoming release. Wishing you many sales! :-)
Delete