The Last Cigarette paperback
$5.99
Walter Regin is sitting on his couch, thinking about his estranged wife and young son. An emergency broadcast snaps him out of his reverie and forces him into action.
Description
This is not a test.
Walter Regin’s life is in shambles. His marriage is on the rocks. His wife, along with their young son, traveled 900 miles to stay with her parents. Alone, Walt wallows in his thoughts, focusing on the series of events that brought him to this place. His concentration breaks when he hears an emergency alert on the television.
He’s left in disbelief at the message. Nuclear war is imminent.
As he looks out at the panicked streets of St. Louis, he grapples with feelings of helplessness and the looming possibility of facing nuclear destruction alone and afraid. With no hope of reaching his family before the bombs arrive, his only option is to survive and hope they do, too.
With the clock ticking down, Walter must confront his past mistakes and find a glimmer of hope amidst the impending doom.
Will he be able to reconcile with his loved ones, or is he doomed to face the end alone?
Includes two additional short stories:
Broken Reel
A man drives along a wooded road, though he has no memory of leaving home. There’s no other traffic, no sign of life, other than a roadside memorial. As the evening progresses, he sees the same memorial again. And again. Is he dreaming or trapped in a nightmare?
The Cleaner Comes at Midnight
The streets of Philadelphia run red with blood. High above, a man watches the city descend into madness from his apartment. Unwilling to risk his life in the hysteria below, he watches as a military helicopter flies over with a message playing from a loudspeaker. Is it a sign of a pending rescue, or is it the beginning of the end?
other formats: ebooks
Additional information
Release Date: | July 12, 2016 |
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Format: | paperback |
Print Length: | 50 pages |
Dimensions: | 6 x 0.13 x 9 inches |
ISBN-13 | 978-1982953515 |
C. McIntosh –
This story is thought-provoking and left to linger on the mind. The mark of a good book. It grabs you full throttle and twists your emotions as well. Walter Regin handles the news of the US being thrown in a nuclear war. A short story it maybe, but its impact is big.