Dungeon Corps
Crypts of Phanos
by Jaxon Reed
Genre: Epic Fantasy
Deep under the city of Phanos, the crypts are filled with monsters. Dungeon Corps works hard to contain
them.
Recruited from prisons, outcasts, misfits, those expelled from academies and even rare volunteers,
Dungeon Corps produces outstanding fighters.
When an ancient threat troubles the Queen’s Land once more, a grizzled veteran leads his young team
down into the depths to rescue the lost and slay a horror known as Ludge.
But two on his team hold closer ties to the monster than anyone realizes. They are elves, running from
assassins tracking them relentlessly since birth.
Ludge should have died 50 years ago. Now it’s up to the team to finish the job. In doing so, they uncover
startling secrets known only to a chosen few.
They discover the elves’ forbidden existence and their raw untapped power can reshape the world.
If they survive.
**only .99 cents!!**
Jaxon Reed is a science fiction and fantasy author. Amazon's Kindle Press selected his book, The
Empathic Detective: A Mystery Thriller, for publication through Kindle Scout. Recently, Ghostsuit: An
Empathic Detective Novel also won a contract through Kindle Scout.
Other recent books include Thieves and Wizards, an epic fantasy, and The Redwood Trilogy Box Set, a
science fiction bundle.
Jaxon is an Aggie, living in Texas on a ranch with his wife and boys, several cats, and one pound
dog.
To receive the latest updates on new releases and opportunities for free reader exclusives, please
visit www.jaxonreed.com/free/
GUEST POST
Which
of your novels can you imagine made into a movie?
I’d
love to see my Empathic Detective series optioned, or Pirates of the
Milky Way, or Dungeon Corps. I think they would all do better as a
series instead of an hour and a half movie.
Does
your book fall into a fantasy subgenre?
Dungeon
Corps has a bit of a “LitRPG” feel to it. Early readers who
played role playing games said it reminded them of that. But, there
are no “stat boxes” or designated leveling. So, it has game-like
elements, but it does not fall in the LitRPG genre per se. I really
wanted to focus more on character development than leveling, so that
is why I chose that approach. As such, Dungeon Corps falls more in
the “Epic Fantasy” category than any other.
Where
did you come up with the name for the book?
Dungeon
Corps does involve a slight play on words, since “dungeon core”
novels are popular in fantasy and LitRPG. My Aggie friends no doubt
will suspect I was thinking at least a little about the Corps at
Texas A&M, those ROTC students studying to be officers in our
Armed Forces.
What
did you enjoy most about writing this book?
The
book involves some of my favorite elements in story telling. One is
the coming together and gradual cohesiveness of a team. Another is
the redemption of outcasts. Finally, I do like good old dungeon
crawls, and this book has those in spades. I had a lot of fun writing
the book, and I hope it shows.
$25 Amazon
Follow the tour HERE for special content and a giveaway!
No comments:
Post a Comment