Showing posts with label Timothy Stelly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Timothy Stelly. Show all posts

Saturday, October 27, 2012

Excerpts from HUMAN TRIAL III: THE FINAL CONFLICT



By
Timothy Stelly

P R O L O G U E


 With the return to climate normalcy came signs of the seasons. Spring brought mild rain and blossoms toLakeConsuela, whose placid waters glittered like polished turquoise. The rebirth of the area featured emerald hillsides, fields thick with tall grass and flowers, and on a light breeze rode the scent of lilac and cherry blossoms. The meadows were alive with an assortment of wildlife, from acrobatic butterflies and frolicking rabbits to squirrels and deer. Silver-bodied fish made the lake their circus, breaking the surface as the red sun shimmered on the water.
Daron Turner sat atop his bench-style tackle box, hidden among the thick tulles, where he hoped neither prying eyes nor time could find him. In his scarred hands was his spinner style reel, and at his side was a coffee can half-filled with squirming night crawlers. To his left was a thermos of coffee, his .32 caliber handgun, and a fluorescent green stringer which he hoped would soon be heavy with the fat catfish and black bass that performed their ballet in the deep.
The warmth of the sun had yet to settle in Daron’s bones, which crackled as he got comfortable. As of late he’d been sluggish and on this morning found it more difficult than usual to keep his eyes open and fixed on the red and white bobber floating atop the rippled water. While he desired to yawn, none came, and even several sips of the coffee failed to jumpstart him. His eyelids grew heavier and his view of the world became like frames of film jammed in a projector; the scene before him unfolded in short, choppy bursts. He didn’t hear Imani, a woman he loved like a daughter, as she made her way along the recently established path.
“I toldReginaI would find you on this side of the lake,” she said, panting. “Trying to take advantage of the shadows?”
The water off the lake blew against her sand-colored skin, and she squinted her large, chocolate eyes. Her hair now flecked with streaks of gray, nearly reached her waist. She stepped closer, which caused the dry twigs to break under her footfalls. Imani set her pole and tackle box next to his.
 “I know, keep it down, I might scare the fish,” she said, with a titter. “That still doesn’t give you the reason to shine me on.”
* * *
Reginapulled her robe over her T-shirt and sweats and eased down onto the top step of the porch. She took a sip from a cup of steaming, jet-black coffee and, no sooner had the first swallow gone down when, a scream in the distance drew her attention. Regina’s eyes narrowed as she looked in the direction Imani had taken. Hardly ten minutes had passed since the younger woman took off to join Daron.
WhenReginasaw Imani tearing up the path without her gear, she dropped her cup onto the porch where it shattered. She screamed for Adam, who came to the door shirtless and red-eyed.
“Ma, what’s the matter?”
He watched asReginawent down the steps and pushed herself toward Imani as fast as her fifty-year-old legs would carry her. Adam’s heart thundered in his chest as he descended the steps two at a time and ran after his mother.
As the women drew closer,Reginacould see the mist and the sorrow in Imani’s eyes. There was no explanation required; hearing one would only destroy the granules of hope thatReginaheld fast to. Adam sped past his mother without stopping to ask Imani what was wrong.
Imani fell intoRegina’s arms. “I-I … must’ve been talking to him two or three minutes before I realized … Oh, my God … he was smiling with his eyes closed …”
Imani turned and allowedReginato put her weight on her as they made their way back toward the lake. They looked on as a barefoot Adam reached Daron first. He stood several feet away and looked at the lifeless, but erect body of his father. Daron’s fishing cap was in place and his fingers were wrapped around the pole as if he’d been anticipating a strike.
Adam felt as if he’d been struck unexpectedly in the solar plexus and, after a half-minute or so, he could breathe again. His second wind came with relief, like cool waters washing over him. Since Daron had returned from Ascención, burned and with his movement limited by pain and taut, webbed skin, Adam realized his father’s days for the world weren’t long.
He recalled the sorrow that weighed on him as Daron performed the simplest tasks with difficulty, albeit with all the pride one could expect from a feisty fifty-four year-old who had ‘been something’ in his day and had crammed two lifetimes into one.
Over time the scarring on Daron’s legs became infected and for the past month there were days when it was hard for him to get out of bed—let alone walk. Perez, the man who had brought Daron fromAlbuquerqueback toLakeConsuela, applied several homeopathic remedies that eased the pain, but the curative effect was negligible.
Since that return, Perez had become a member of their extended family, as did the Barfields—Jeb and Darlene—a middle-aged couple with a nineteen-year-old son, Beau. The Barfields had come in from the cold after a two-year north to south excursion, from centralCanadato the American west. They were welcomed, even though for Adam it reminded him of a passage he’d read in Daron’s history of the post-war world: “No sooner would we welcome newcomers, when death would make a house call and even things out.”
Despite his suffering, Daron never complained and all who lived in the cabin with him at Lake Consuela believed that every day they had him around was by the grace of God, that it was a blessing Daron ever made it home to them, to live out his final days on the land he loved.
It was more than a case of the death of a friend, husband and father. Unbeknownst to theLakeConsueladenizens, it was the loss of the de facto Father of the new Country that wasAmerica.
* * * *
Two months after arriving inGraniteCounty, Perez wanted to see what the town ofStonecutterlooked like, and Adam agreed to be his tour guide. They went via horseback along a spider web-cracked road that in some places was equal parts dirt, gravel and asphalt. The trip was a quiet one, as Perez took more interest in the rolling foothills and the nearby orchards, where the trees were heavy with apricots, peaches and apples.
A warm breeze met them as they rode along the streets of Stonecutter. Within minutes they passed the remnants of the old hotel where the MMD—Mulholland’s Mad Dogs—holed up during the thermal onslaught of 2005.
“This is what’s left of the building where I was born,” Adam said in a voice thick with solemnity. “As a newborn I was nearly murdered by a man named Mickey Thornberry and his female conspirator, Doris Baker.”
“While inAlbuquerqueI had the privilege of reading your father’s writings,” Perez said. His tone was reverent as he went on. “It was not just the heat and an unseen enemy they worried about, but that eventually fear would wear them down.”
They continued on and after ten minutes came to a stop in front of the old Mulholland’s Sporting Goods store. They dismounted and Adam retrieved a black pouch from his saddle bag. For reasons he didn’t understand, the closer he came to the front doors of the building, the more of an emotional event it became for him. It was all Adam could do to fight back tears as he looked at the damaged stucco walls.
“This is the place where my parents, MJ’s dad, and Gordon Peters first came together,” he said. “Must be more than two hundred bullet holes.”
Perez gazed at the black holes. “I read that the battles were fierce.” He turned to Adam. “Are you okay””
“I’m fine.”
“Want to go inside?”
Adam nodded and Perez led the way into the musty confines of MMD first ‘fort’. Adam tried to imagine the logistics and the events as they unfolded on the pages of Daron’s journal. The glass cases where ammunition was once stored were caked with dust, and the camouflage uniforms that hung from the metal racks reeked of mildew.
“We need to come and clean this place up; turn it into a museum,” Perez said, “Even if we are the only ones who ever see it.”
Adam didn’t hear a word. His eyes were drawn to a yellowed piece of paper inside a plastic slip cover tacked to a wall at the back of the store. Adam walked over and took down the slip cover. After he stared at it for several seconds, he placed it carefully into his shoulder pouch.
That evening he shared the contents of the paper with Perez, Imani, Sara and the Barfields. The piece of paper read:

Human Trial
by Daron Turner,
September 2005
 
 
The city besieged by burdensome heat
Was hard to sit let alone move your feet
We tired from the power of the sun’s glare
All were unnerved by the still, arid air
Death made his house calls furious and fleet
 
The sun dried the rivers, it scorched the wheat
Felled the young and melted arctic ice sheets
A young girl, her eyes heavy with despair
Wondered aloud, “Is this it?”
 
A man whose eyes were laden with crow’s feet
Drew a gun, shot himself dead in the street
Doc yelled, “We depleted the ozone layer!”
The Rev cried, “We need to engage in prayer!”
A pregnant teen standing by in bare feet
Wondered aloud, “Is this it?”


Monday, March 5, 2012

Survivors of a thermal war battle aliens who ...

HUMAN TRIAL has been called “frightening...” "… a look at the psychology of survival, and a timely cautionary tale.”

Sunday, May 23, 2010

ADAM'S WAR




JUST RELEASED BY ALL THINGS THAT MATTER PRESS!

Adam's War
Authored by Timothy N. Stelly Sr.

The biggest threat to mankind...is MAN.

Daron Turner leads his small army of thermal war survivors in a cross-country battle to Big Springs, Nebraska. Their hope is to rebuild America as members of a larger human colony known as The New Frontier. The colony is led by megalomaniacal J.D. Cooks, who has other plans: To male himself the ruler of a burgeoning world empire.

Cooks and Turner engage in an epic clash of wills, and when Daron reveals that his nemesis is collaborating with aliens to destroy human life, the MMD again prepare for war. This time the army is led by Daron's son, the now twenty-one year-old Adam. After a fierce battle at Big Springs, Adam leads his charges south of the border to engage in a showdown that will determine whether or not mankind survives.

About the author:
Timothy N. Stelly is a poet, essayist, novelist and screenwriter. HUMAN TRIAL II: ADAM'S WAR, is the second part of an epic sci-fi trilogy that began with 2009's, HUMAN TRIAL He is also the author of Snakes In The Grass, a short story that appears in the AIDS-themed anthology The Shattered Glass Effect.

Mr. Stelly resides in northern California with his three youngest children-Dante, Kimberly and Lawrence. He is currently putting the finishing touches on a coming-of-age novel, People Darker Than Blue.

NOW AT http://allthingsthatmatterpress.com

Thursday, April 29, 2010

"THE BOOK SCARES ME..."


Timothy Stelly’s HUMAN TRIAL (2009, All Things That Matter Press) and HUMAN TRIAL II: ADAM’S WAR (2010, All Things That Matter Press), present the tale of a ragtag group of survivors of an alien-launched thermal war that has destroyed nearly all human and animal life on the planet. HUMAN TRIAL raised the question, What happens when all that remains of the world is fear, distrust and desperation? HT II follows the group on a cross-country trek that results in a final, frenzied battle against the extra-terrestrial invaders.

Reviews for part one of Timothy Stelly’s sci-fi noir thriller, Human Trial, have been positive. Readers and critics from the U.S. and Canada have praised the book for its grittiness and frightening tenor.

“…Superb. It's as if I'm one of the 10 going through the same trials they are. I can hardly wait to read the next installment.”—T.C. Matthews, author oif What A Web We Weave

“The book scares me because of the possibility of this happening in our future and how we will handle it. Scary. Deeply thought out…Timothy definitely has his own voice and it is powerful.” —Minnie Miller, author of The Seduction of Mr. Bradley

“Human Trial was a well written, well thought out book with plenty of biting, satirical social, religious and racial commentary interspersed within the dialogue. The drama, and the pathos, were nonstop, and I never knew what to expect next.” –Brooklyn Darkchild, author of This Ain’t No Hearts and Flowers Love Story, Pt. I & II

“[This] story has been haunting me-reminds me of Octavia Butler's 'Parable of the Sower’…Stelly's work haunts me two years after I read it.”
--Evelyn Palfrey, author of Dangerous Dilemma and The Price Of Passion

“4 out of 5 stars. I felt the echoes of other notable science fiction novels, including "Parable of the Sower" by Octavia Butler, "Lucifer's Hammer" by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle, and "Manhattan Transfer" by John E. Stith. Timothy Stelly creates a believable milieu of small-town America being turned upside down by forces beyond comprehension, and puts the reader right in the middle of the action.—Claxton Graham, Amazon.com review

“Human Trial is at once a sci-fi story, a look at the psychology of survival, and a timely cautionary tale regarding current environmental woes; our individual and collective responsibility to one another and to the planet…It is an entertaining and intricate story that can be read and enjoyed along with the likes of Mitchener, King, or Peter Straub. Stelly intuitively knows what everyday people will do to survive and how their interactions with each other will sound.”—Brian Barbeito, Columnist Useless-Knowledge.com and author of Fluoride And The Electric Light Queen

“Gritty and intense, Human Trial will leave you stupefied and terrified, neither of which will protect your gut from wrenching. The message finally revealed is not only horrifying, but real, as is the omen foretold. Turning tables and unbalanced scales foster confusion and terror in an epic far greater than its words.” - Brian L. Doe, Author, The Grace Note, Barley & Gold; Co-Author, Waking God Trilogy
“Oh the suspense, the drama, the intensity, the love I’m having for this story…trust indeed that my adrenaline cannot go any higher. This will be a series finale you don’t want to miss.” – Walee, author of Confession Is Good For The Soul and What’s On The Menu? All Of Mw!

BIOGRAPHY

Timothy N. Stelly is a poet, essayist, novelist and screenwriter from northern California. He describes his writing as “socially conscious,” and his novel, HUMAN TRIAL, is the first part of a sci-fi trilogy and is available from Amazon.com, allthingsthatmatterpress.com and in e-book format at mobipocket.com. Reviews of HUMAN TRIAL can be read at amazon.com

HUMAN TRIAL II: ADAM’S WAR (All Things That Matter Press) is scheduled for release in MAY, 2010. Stelly also has a short story included in the AIDS-themed anthology, THE SHATTERED GLASS EFFECT (2009) . His story SNAKES IN THE GRASS, Is a tale of love, betrayal and its sometimes deadly consequences.

In 2003, Stelly won First Prize in the Pout-erotica poetry contest for his erotic piece, C’mon Condi.

Contact Info: www.stellyhumantrial.com. stellbread@yahoo.com
Both books available at amazon.com, barnesandnoble.com and allthingsthatmatterpress.com
Visit me at: www.stellyhumantrial.com orhttp://www.myspace.com/pittwit

Human Trial is still available from amazon.com and http://allthingsthatmatterpress.com. Paperback
$18.99, e-book (kindle) format, $10.99.

Read the Brian Barbeito review of HUMAN TRIAL at: http://www.useless-knowledge.com/1234/09apr/article008.html. Read more online reviews at amazon.com and http://www.bookfinder4u.com/customer_reviews.bfu?isbn=0982272200

"Writer's block is a fancy term made up by whiners so they can have an excuse to drink alcohol." -- Steve Martin
COMING IN MAY: HUMAN TRIAL II: ADAM'S WAR

BUY FROM AMAZON: http://www.amazon.com/Human-Trial-Timothy-Stelly-Sr/dp/0982272200/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1272546217&sr=1-1
ALSO A KINDLE EDITION

Friday, January 16, 2009

LATEST RELEASES FROM ATTMPRESS



We will list all of our books on this site as well as links to our author web sites. In the meantime, we would like to begin the list of books that are currently available through ATTMPress. Our latest releases are HUMAN TRIAL, by TIMOTHY N. STELLY, SR and THE PROFILE by Gregory Victor Babic.

HUMAN TRIAL-What happens when all that remains of the world is fear, distrust and desperation?
Daron Turner is the leader of a ragtag collection of small town Americans who've managed to survive a thermal war waged by intergalactic attackers. The survivors have gathered together in a sporting goods store, where they not only endure the heat, but ward off marauders, rabid animals and overcome their own fears and in-fighting.
Aliens hope to manufacture a new race that becomes acclimated to earth's environment. With time running out, Daron and his cohorts must force a confrontation, as the fate of mankind rests in their hands.

THE PROFILE-Danielle McCormack, student at Middlewood High School, wants to be a journalist. However, she could not possibly have anticipated, when Dean Lawrence Polking, head of HRL Enterprises, internationally-renowned retailing magnate and hated Destroyer of the Middlewood Old Town Mall, attended the Annual Awards night at her school as the Honored Guest Speaker and returning 'Favorite Son", that her life would be thrown into turmoil and everything she thought she knew about the man and his dream would have to be re-evaluated. ? How could she have known that everything she thought she knew about herself and her place in the world would come to mean nothing against truths and realities she could never have anticipated?

Both titles are now available from Amazon.com, Mobipocket, Kindle Editions and from the ATTMPress E-Store in paperback. The reviews are great and both books address issues that are relevant to today's society.