Books by Eric Douglas

Thriller fiction and Non-fiction

  • Home
  • Mike Scott Thrillers
    • Held Hostage: Search for the Juncal
    • Water Crisis: Day Zero
    • Turks and Chaos: Hostile Waters
    • The 3rd Key: Sharks in the Water
    • Oil and Water: Crash in Curacao
    • Return to Cayman: Paradise Held Hostage
    • Heart of the Maya: Murder for the Gods
    • Wreck of the Huron: Cuban Secrets
    • Guardians’ Keep: Mystery below the Adriatic
    • Flooding Hollywood: Fanatics at the Dam
    • Cayman Cowboys: Reefs Under Pressure
  • Withrow Key
    • Lyin’ Fish
    • Tales from Withrow Key
  • Agent AJ West
  • About the Author
    • Publicity and Interviews
  • Nonfiction
    • For Cheap Lobster
    • Heart Survivor: Recovery After Heart Surgery
    • Oral History
      • Batter Up!
      • Memories of the Valley
      • WV Voices of War / Common Valor
      • Capturing Memories: How to Record Oral Histories
    • Dive-abled: The Leo Morales Story
    • Keep on, Keepin’ On: A Breast Cancer Story
    • WV Voices of War / Common Valor
    • Russia: The New Age
    • Scuba Diving Safety
  • Free Short Fiction
  • Other Fiction
    • Sea Turtle Rescue and Other Stories
    • River Town
You are here: Home / Blog Posts

Withrow Key series now available on Nook, iBook and Kindle!

November 16, 2015 By Eric Douglas

lyin fish cover webThe entire Withrow Key series, including the newly released Lyin’ Fish, is now available in multiple ebook formats. You can read them on Kindle, Nook and iBook and in multiple formats through Smashwords.

Smashwords

You can read a short interview/profile with me on Smashwords and download all of the Withrow Key stories along with the FREE Mike Scott adventure Land Sharks and the children’s collection Sea Turtle Rescue and Other Stories.

Barnes and Noble

You can see all of the Withrow Key short stories here.

Or download the FREE Mike Scott Adventure Land Sharks here.

You can also find the children’s collection Sea Turtle Rescue and Other Stories in softcover and Nook here.

Ibooks

You can find all of those same books on iBooks here.

(Just for the record, the book Leadership Equation is from another Eric Douglas. I didn’t write that.)

For now, the Mike Scott thriller novels will remain exclusive to Kindle, but if the Withrow Key stories do well, Mike Scott could follow suit.

Filed Under: Books, Diving, New Releases

2015 Halloween Short Story Collection

October 30, 2015 By Eric Douglas

flash fiction halloweenInspired by writer friend Loren Eaton’s Advent Flash Fiction collections, this is the third year I’ve asked fellow writers to give me their spooky stories for Halloween. Each year it seems to grow a bit more and a few more writers step up to contribute.

This year, we made it all about Flash Fiction. The criteria for these Halloween stories was 100 words. No more. No less. It’s an interesting challenge to write something that short. You have to imply a lot, because you can’t say it. That’s the beauty of it.

Take a few moments and check out each of the following writer’s take on Halloween in 100 words. You’ll be amused, amazed and maybe a little creeped out.

Come back from time to time. I’ll add more as writers send them to me.

Happy Halloween!

2015 Halloween Collection

Exhibit S and Tronie by Loren Eaton

Two Short and Shivery Tales by Susanna Connelly Holstein: Left Behind and Separation

Halloween Decorations by Leanne Stowers

3 Halloween Stories By Cat Pleska

The Stairwell by M. Lynne Squires

Alas… poor Yorick by Eric Fritzius

Treasure By Elizabeth Gaucher

Quotas by JD Byrne

Two stories by Eric Douglas

 

Previous collections and Halloween stories

  • 2014 collection
  • 2013 collection
  • My first Halloween story (2012): Never Need Another Fix

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Halloween Flash Fiction

October 30, 2015 By Eric Douglas

My contributions to the Halloween Flash Fiction collection for 2015. If you want to read the other submissions in this year’s collection, you can do that here.

Refreshing Rain

The man smiled, for the first time in what felt like ages. The gentle rain sounded like magic on the leaves in the forest. He turned his face to the sky to catch the first drops.

He had given up hope on ever feeling rain drops on his face again. The cool rain water was just what he needed to get his spirits back.

They were preparing for the Samhain festival, the ancient rite signaling the end of the growing season, with a human sacrifice.

Now, if he could just get out of the pit before the priest came back.

 

Trick or Treat

Annabelle Evans never hands out candy. She says she’s too busy. Or doesn’t have any money. Or has to go out. If she didn’t spend her money on heroin, it would be different.

She lives in the last trailer on the row. That means we have to walk down there for nothing. Just in case.

This year, everyone’s planning to just trick her. No one is going to ask for treats.

Whoever got here and put up crime scene tape all over the place is an absolute genius.

It looks just like there’s been a murder in the trailer park.

 

This story is a bit of an homage to the Cowboy Junkies song Murder, tonight, in the Trailer Park.

Filed Under: New Releases

“Sea Turtle Rescue and other stories”now available!

October 14, 2015 By Eric Douglas

sea turtle near Grand CaymanEveryone gets excited when they see a sea turtle in the water. They are just cool and fun to watch.

When my girls were young, after reading innumerable Magic Treehouse books with them, I decided to write them their very own chapter books to read. The first story was Sea Turtle Rescue and sea turtles still hold a special place for us today. Over the years, I wrote three more children’s chapter stories with the same characters and now, for the first time, all four stories are available in one place. Three of these stories were published as part of the Newspapers in Education program, making them available in serial form for kids from all over the country to learn about the ocean. They were published in places as far apart as Bermuda and Iowa.

Sea Turtle Rescue cover artThese stories are great for kids (or grandkids) interested in the ocean, history, sea turtles, sharks and science. The two main characters are young girls, but boys like the stories as well. My step-nephews tell me how much they like the stories all the time.

“Sea Turtle Rescue and other stories” is available in softcover for $10 and in ebook format for $5.99. The ebook is available through Kindle, Nook and most of the other ebook retailers. You can download it in multiple ereader formats through Smashwords.

  • Softcover $10
  • Kindle 5.99
  • Nook $5.99
  • Smashwords $5.99

Many thanks go out as well to Rick Melvin for three of the inside illustrations and to my older daughter Ashlin Douglas for the cover art.

Description

Two young girls move to the Outer Banks of North Carolina and learn about the ocean and life on the coast. There are four early chapter books in this collection, written for readers six- to nine-years-old. The stories are exciting but also include information on science, the ocean and history.

Sea Turtle Rescue is an ocean story about protecting sea turtles. When an injured sea turtle shows up near their home on the Outer Banks of North Carolina, Jayne and Marie, along with their friends Javier and Monique, search the beach to find the turtle’s nest and protect it from danger. They know the time is getting short and if they don’t find it soon, the eggs might not get a chance to hatch.

Fight for Fort Hatteras is a history story about the civil war. Jayne and Marie take a school trip to visit the site of a Civil War battle near their home on the Outer Banks. Marie wanders off and finds herself in the middle of the battle and afraid she may never see her family again.

Hurricane! is a science story on hurricanes hitting the coast. Jayne and Marie are faced with Hurricane Erin bearing down on their seaside town. Do they evacuate or stay with their father and protect the aquarium?

Swimming with Sharks is an ocean story about sharks and their value. Jayne and Marie love the ocean and enjoy spending time out on the water with their parents. For them, sharks are beautiful creatures, not something to be feared. But an up close and personal encounter makes Marie think twice.

You can read a number of reviews from the separate stories on the book page..

Filed Under: Adventure, Books, Diving, New Releases

Fiction becomes reality on Grand Cayman

October 5, 2015 By Eric Douglas

Ten years ago, my first novel (Cayman Cowboys) revolved around the conflict that happens when development squares off against the environment. In that case, a developer was destroying coral reefs in search of treasure while building a cruise ship dock. There were protests, corrupt politicians and good guys trying to save the reef. At the time, I honestly thought it was a little farfetched because the reef in Grand Cayman is a main draw for visitors. The idea that anyone would allow a developer to come in and haplessly destroy coral reefs that have earned the island the distinction of being one of the top diving destinations in the world was a bit out there. I thought.

Sea turtle on a reef on Grand CaymanFlash forward 10 years and the government of the Cayman Islands is planning to build a new pier that will allow cruise ships to dock in the harbor and not have to rely on shuttle boats, called tenders, to get the tourists back and forth the dock. The problem is, to build the dock, the government is going to have to destroy acres of viable coral reef and a historic wreck dive site that is in the middle of the approach to the harbor. They have discussed the idea of moving the reefs, but that’s just about the most absurd thing anyone without a financial stake in getting the dock built has ever heard. Those who have a financial stake in the dock think it makes perfect sense.

Spotted moray on Grand CaymanThe short version is they would have to cut loose and lift thousands of tons of rock and then relocate it to a new area. It’s all underwater, of course, and you just can’t blast it loose and then scoop it up. It would have to be cut loose from below the sand and carefully lifted and moved. On top of that, wherever you would move it to would have to have similar conditions of currents, depth and sunlight to allow the coral reef to continue living.

In short, it’s impossible. Read this opinion piece on the subject.

As an additional layer of absurd, beyond the reef that will be destroyed by the construction of the dock, many additional acres will be destroyed by the silt from the construction and dredging. That will devastate many existing hotels just outside the harbor by destroying their house reefs and the dive sites they frequent.

Arrow crab on Grand CaymanNone of this makes any sense. Unless you consider that the cruise ship lines want the dock. And they spend a lot of money on the island. It all comes back to short-sighted decisions in the interest of money.

The above video is just a simple collage of eight different dive sites in the area near the harbor. All of it will be destroyed or seriously degraded by the actual construction and the dredging. The conditions weren’t perfect the week I shot the video. As a matter of fact it rained every day so the visibility was a little degraded. A couple days, it was raining while I was in the water. Still, it shows the amazing diversity of undersea life on Grand Cayman. And it shows what we all stand to lose all in search of money. In the long run, tourism will suffer.

IMG_6005~2I think I’ll try to get back to Cayman one more time before they move forward with this disaster. Because once construction begins, the island will be permanently off my destination list..

Filed Under: Adventure, Books, Diving, Documentary, Photography, Travel

Do something to help someone with breast cancer

September 30, 2015 By Eric Douglas

Pageflex Persona [document: PRS0000038_00053]One of my greatest pet peeves (but not my only one) is the concept of “slacktivism”. That is, people who profess to “care” about an issue, but only make the most perfunctory of gestures and never make an effort to do anything. A few years ago, you would see the call to “change your profile photo on Facebook to a cartoon character to fight child abuse” or something like that. The implication was that if you didn’t do it, you supported child abuse, I guess. Fortunately, those things seem to have died out.

Tomorrow is the first day of October and with that comes Breast Cancer Awareness Month. You’ll see professional athletes wearing pink tape on the field and celebrities donning pink ribbons when they go out on the town. That’s all well and good, and for all I know those public figures have also made large contributions to their favorite (and legitimate) charities working to find a cure for cancer. I will admit to being skeptical, but will give them the benefit of the doubt.

A couple years ago, my friend Jean Hanna Davis invited me to sit with her and record our conversations while she went through chemotherapy for breast cancer. That go-round (her second) was almost 10 years after her first time round of chemo. Those interviews eventually became the book Keep on, Keepin’ On, A Breast Cancer Survivor Story. Jean explained to me that she has a love/hate relationship with October. There are times, as a survivor, she just doesn’t want to deal with it. She doesn’t want the constant reminders. At other times, she said she really appreciates the visible show of support from friends and strangers.

And that brings me back to the idea of “doing something.” Most of us can’t afford to make large donations, and that’s fine. (Of course, a lot of little donations do add up.) It’s possible, however, to make a difference for someone with smaller gestures. Not having to cook when you feel bad post-chemo is a blessing. So are donations of paper plates and plastic knives and forks. That way, no one has to do dishes and there’s no problems with a metallic taste. This time of year can be exhausting when it comes to yardwork. Offer to rake leaves or decorate for the holidays.

If you know someone who is dealing with breast cancer, or any cancer for that matter, understand that they may not exactly be thrilled with your pink hair to “raise awareness.” But they might appreciate some help with the kids, a massage or a nice home-cooked meal..

Filed Under: Books

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Real Thugs: A Cult of Murder — Small groups of travelers have disappeared all over the mid-Atlantic without a trace. When bodies turn up with what appear to be ritual markings, FBI Agent AJ West is on the hunt for what might be a serial killer. Or something even more sinister. It’s a race against […]

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