Today is publication day for Starlite Pulp Review #7! Jennifer joins 14 other writers in the newest collection from Starlite Pulp, the publishers and podcasters who are bringing pulp back (not that it ever left) and making it look so good.
The book is available on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, or direct from the publisher’s website!
Here is how Jennifer’s creature thriller “The Apex” opens, with student archaeologist Eddie Melendy taking in the island where they are about to get to work:
There was nothing warm about Homestead Island. It was tiny, barren, and almost inaccessible, a freckle in the northern face of the Great Salt Lake. Its true value, to the scientists, scholars, and adventurers that occasionally journeyed to the island, was in the study and recovery of the fossils found throughout the island’s many tunnels and caves. To Eddie Melendy, it might as well have been another planet, a glimpse into a long-forgotten past. A shrine to the dead.
To learn what happens when this team of archaeologists trespass upon the territory of an enormous, ancient apex predator, you’ll have to order Starlite Pulp Review #7! As a former undergraduate archaeologist, much of what Eddie and the other students experience was inspired by Jennifer’s own time spent digging in Makauwahi Cave—though of course, Utah’s fossil record is quite different from Hawai’i! We hope you enjoy reading “The Apex” and the 14 other stories in Starlite Pulp Review #7!

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