Author: | Joseph Harles | ISBN: | 9781310110672 |
Publisher: | Joseph Harles | Publication: | March 30, 2014 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition | Language: | English |
Author: | Joseph Harles |
ISBN: | 9781310110672 |
Publisher: | Joseph Harles |
Publication: | March 30, 2014 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition |
Language: | English |
In a world where life's lessons are laid down on paper and passed on through generations, comes the ridiculous adventure of Nox and Karid that will leave you wondering about the author... who does that? And why would this get passed down as a useful allegory?
Karid is your average ungrateful self absorbed 19-year old who still demands birthday parties. When his uncle ponies up a grand total of three dollars on his present, a Wiffle Ball set, Karid scoffs at the cheapness of the gift. But hey, it beats the velour sweatsuits he regularly gets from his grandmother.
His best friend Nox suggests they go outside and play a game and when they do, a vortex opens up sending them into an outlandish world where these lazy narcissists play the protagonist role they've only experienced with a PS3 controller in their hands.
Often hilarious, occasionally enlightening, and never didactic (use Google to look that word up), you'll keep turning the pages to see why the food in a Cup-O-Noodles wants them to pay for murder, why mice are freebasing cheese in an attempt to escape Earth, and why an albino king want to skin our heroes alive.
In a world where life's lessons are laid down on paper and passed on through generations, comes the ridiculous adventure of Nox and Karid that will leave you wondering about the author... who does that? And why would this get passed down as a useful allegory?
Karid is your average ungrateful self absorbed 19-year old who still demands birthday parties. When his uncle ponies up a grand total of three dollars on his present, a Wiffle Ball set, Karid scoffs at the cheapness of the gift. But hey, it beats the velour sweatsuits he regularly gets from his grandmother.
His best friend Nox suggests they go outside and play a game and when they do, a vortex opens up sending them into an outlandish world where these lazy narcissists play the protagonist role they've only experienced with a PS3 controller in their hands.
Often hilarious, occasionally enlightening, and never didactic (use Google to look that word up), you'll keep turning the pages to see why the food in a Cup-O-Noodles wants them to pay for murder, why mice are freebasing cheese in an attempt to escape Earth, and why an albino king want to skin our heroes alive.