Friday, January 10, 2014

Champagne Book Group acquires Shadows On Iron Mountain by Chuck Walsh!

Champagne Book Group acquires Shadows On Iron Mountain by Chuck Walsh!




Chuck Walsh’s long-awaited Tennessee thriller, Shadows On Iron Mountain, represented by Loiacono Literary Agency www.loiaconoliteraryagency.com, has been acquired by Champagne Book Group, a Canadian publisher www.champagnebooks.com/ with three imprints: Champagne, Carnal Passions and Burst. Champagne Books is an independent small press located in High River, AB Canada. The contract for the sequel, Backwoods Justice, is pending.

Chuck Walsh is a graduate of the University of South Carolina, and discovered a passion for writing in 2004. Since then, he has written human-interest articles for a dozen publications and co-authored Faces of Freedom (featured on Sean Hannity’s book list), a book that recognizes the noble lives of U.S. soldiers who died while fighting in Iraq or Afghanistan. A Month of Tomorrows and A Passage Back have been acquired and are being published by Vinspire Publishing (release dates 2014/2015). www.chuckwalshwriter.com A Splintered Dream, the story of Cape Jeffers, is available for acquisition.

Shadows On Iron Mountain -What happens on Iron Mountain, usually does not leave it -- literally or physically… There is an abductor of women with the tendency to silence them permanently, when he is no longer amused; removing any and all obstacles - human specifically.

Jason and Kara are excited about their romantic, mountain get-away until they arrive at their secluded cabin on Iron Mountain. Although Kara immediately wants to head for a motel, Jason talks her into staying. The first night she sees someone outside the cabin, the next day she goes to the frig to get a drink and disappears without a trace. She is not the first and won’t be the last. Iron Mountain has a rapist/murderer hiding in its depths. Thomas Jordan, a detective from the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, is called in to dissect Iron Mountain, if need be, to find Kara. What he finds are mountain people who won’t turn in their own; willing to kill anyone who tries to ascend their fortress, and a mounting number of floating female corpses in Doe Creek.
   
Walsh holds your unwavering attention from the first sentence and refuses to let you go until the last word, or does he ever let go at all? This promises to be a best seller.



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