The Machina Series

If Franz Kafka made love to Stephen King…

Machina is a big, huge, massive, sprawling epic. Originally it was one volume, consisting of The Fall of Man, and God from a Machine. I couldn’t publish something that big, so I separated it into two novels. With the inclusion of the prequel, The Haunting of House, it became a three book set.

Volume One ~ Machina: The Haunting of House. Heroes aren’t born, they’re made! This is the story of a hero who will attempt to save the world in the succeeding two volumes of Machina. His name is Jimmy, and he is not a very nice man. He will learn how to be nice, however, at the cost of his life. How does a man who ceases to exist come to save the world? You’ll have to read The Fall of Man to find out!

Volume Two ~ Machina: The Fall of Man. In 1967 a stoned out hippie fell down an elevator shaft and found God. Finding God, and doing God’s bidding, however, are two different things, however. Especially as, when the world falls apart, it becomes apparent that God is insane. But that’s beside the point. What is the point is that a ten year old boy must create an army in New York and travel across the country to the Golden Gate Bridge. The Golden Gate Bridge is where man will survive, or cease to exist except as fodder for giant, man-eating bugs. Check out Machina: The Fall of Man.

Volume Three ~ Machina: God from a Machine! A ten year old boy is bringing an army from the east. A real schizhoid, not one of those fake ones, is bringing an army east of the California Ocean (formerly the Central Valley of California). East of the California Ocean a person of ‘fluid gender’ is bringing a third army. These three armies will take a stand on the Golden Gate Bridge, and mankind will stand or fall. What nobody knows is that a stoned out hippie from 1967 is coming, too. He’s not just insane, he’s really, really MAD! The final solution is in Machina: God from a Machine.

There are 707 pages and 283,482 words in this series.

Books are 6 by 9.