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About dborys

Author of STREET STORIES suspense novels

Free Short Stories

If you’ve been following my blog or Facebook page for a while, you know that just before my suspense novel Painted Black was picked up by my publisher, I had been considering self-publishing it.  As an experiment in how difficult that process was, I self-published two short stories and a collection of mini-mysteries.

Since New Libri offered me a contract, I never did take the plunge with the novel, but Peeling the Onion, Red Light, Green Light, and Weeping Widows has been available ever since then as an e-book on Amazon and places like Kobo and Barnes and Noble.

I’ve now decided to give Amazon exclusive access to those stories and have removed them from all other venues.  That’s the bad news if you don’t like Amazon or have a Kindle or Kindle app.  But here’s the good news!  You can now download the stories from Amazon FOR FREE!

Here are the links if you are interested, and if you like them, maybe you will even think of buying Painted Black as well (which is available in all formats, including print).

A short story about the contrasts of light and dark in the life of young woman in Seattle’s Capitol Hill neighborhood. Homeless and filled with rage, Star battles to survive life on the streets and escape the past. “Ugliness lives inside of me, but I’m a good girl.  I’m always a good girl; Daddy taught me right.  My head spins, my stomach burns, but I swallow all the screams.”

via Peeling the Onion: Debra Borys: Amazon.com: Kindle Store.

How far will a kid go to survive on the streets of Chicago? When life is a series of stops and starts, it’s easy to go too far before you know it. Chris started out like a golden apple on a tree. Will he ripen in the sunshine and reach his full potential, or will he fall and rot before someone can save him?

via Red Light,Green Light: Debra Borys: Amazon.com: Kindle Store.

Evelyn A. Archer named her detective agency “Undercover Operations” because catching spouses between the sheets with someone they’re not wedded to is her specialty. Every time she uncovers proof a client’s spouse, fiancé, or “significant other” is one evolutionary step below homo erectus, it feels like she’s really reaming her own sleazy ex-husband. No wonder she loves her job.

via Weeping Widows: Debra Borys: Amazon.com: Kindle Store.

Where Do You Get Your Ideas

Writers are often asked this question.  The truth is, I get more more ideas than I know what to do with and they come from many sources.  Prominent for me, however, are odd news stories that just make my imagination start sparking in unusual ways.

Take the article I found below that a friend posted on Facebook.  I immediately wished I wrote either historical or horror novels, because here’s where my thoughts went when reading about this human brain preserved for a millennium:

  • Historical Novel Idea:  The owner of the brain was a person accused of witchcraft or other devilish voodoo-like powers.  Upon being convicted (either formally or by a heathen mob) and hung to death, the head was cut off and disposed of in the bog separate from the body because it was believed the person would otherwise be resurrected from the dead and come back to haunt them all.
  • Horror Novel Idea:  The reason the brain is still in such good shape is not because of the preservation potential of the bog muck, but because evil resides within it.  In the brain lives a demon, perhaps, that used the skull as a “shell,” or the brain lies dormant due to an evil spell.  It has been in the bog all these years waiting to be released so that it can wreak havoc on the world.
  • Actually, this could even be an historical horror novel idea.  After the head is thrown into the bog, someone finds it or it rises to the surface and the evil they tried to prevent once again roams the earth.

“…damage to the neck vertebrae is consistent with a hanging. The head was then carefully severed from the neck using a small blade, such as a knife,” added O’Connor, a post-doctoral research associate at the University of Bradford. “This was used to cut through the throat and between the vertebrae and has left a cluster of fine cut marks on the bone.”

The brain-containing skull was found at Heslington, Yorkshire, in the United Kingdom. O’Connor and her team suspect the site served a ceremonial function that persisted from the Bronze Age through the early Roman period. Many pits at the site were marked with single stakes. The remains of the man were without a body, but the scientists also found the headless body of a red deer that had been deposited into a channel.

Laser imaging, chemical analysis and other examinations revealed that the brain naturally preserved over the millennia. The scientists found no evidence for bacterial or fungal activity, and described the tissue as being “odorless…with a resilient, tofu-like texture.”

The condition of the brain is remarkable for its age.

via Prehistoric Human Brain Found Pickled in Bog : Discovery News.

What does the article inspire your imagination to write?