Passion and Pandemonium
by
Book Details
About the Book
Colt and Molly, intensely in love, face devastating horror with grace and humor while fighting to contain a truly horrendous invasive species. “Passion and Pandemonium” is a very timely novel-sized work that mixes romance and humor with the stark terror of a believable monster story. It is timely because killer snakeheads imported from China have been found in a Maryland pond and the Potomac River. This is not “a giant alligator in my basement” type of tale. Ecocidae Gigas Dentire or Giant Toothed Pike were thought to be extinct although Inuit people have tried for years to tell the Kabloona (White Man) about what they call “The Qaakil”; sixteen-foot monsters found in some remote lakes of the far north. Those stories were dismissed as folklore. The Stanton family takes a brave and principled stance when they realize they are responsible for importing these monsters into New York State waterways. Colt and Molly will experience horrifying situations including attempted murder as they work to contain these monsters while at the same time discovering the joys of newfound love.
About the Author
An old school romantic with a belief in the inherent goodness of man, Bill Nielsen’s fascination with romance and humor crafted “Passion and Pandemonium.” His fears about the invasive snakeheads and big Asian carp overrunning local waterways added a fearful aspect, the giant Qaakil, to this tale. An ex-marine and a widower, Nielsen has been involved with technical journals, coauthoring one published book and producing many papers involving dyeing and colors. He writes humorous articles with morals for a local newspaper under the pseudonym Hill Bill. As an avid Northern Pike fisherman, Nielsen tries to catch the nearest thing to a Qaakil that he can. Retired, he now lives in rural Upstate New York.