Caught between gods, monsters, and interdimensional chaos, Saru just wanted one big payday—too bad she blew up half of Philadelphia instead. Now stripped of her implants, down to nothing but her infamous grit, Saru is on the run, hunted by aliens, vengeful deities, and the monstrous spawn that hatch when universes collide.
With nothing left to lose, she hijacks a luxury plane, stocks up at the minibar, and teams up with a rogue hive-mind aristocrat. Together they plummet into the bizarre, grotesque, and darkly hilarious world of _Cloud Country_—a place where cosmic horror collides with razor-sharp satire, and survival means making deals with the strangest of devils.
Fans of H.P. Lovecraft, Neal Stephenson, China Miéville, and David Lynch will devour this R-rated blend of hardboiled anti-heroine, biohacking dystopia, and absurdist humor. This is for those who love their cyberpunk grim, their horror cosmic, and their fiction as weird as the night is long.
RATED R: strong language, graphic violence, disturbing horror, and unflinching dark humor. Perfect for readers drawn to body horror, new weird, and speculative fiction that bites back.
Pick up "Cloud Country" and dive into the chaos—a journey through a world where the rules are rewritten on every page, and survival is the ultimate cosmic joke.
Andy Futuro is an American writer of speculative fiction, which has been variously categorized science fiction, cyberpunk, horror, noir, metaphysical, absurdist, and dystopian. Futuro's Special Sin series follows a strong female protagonist as she battles aliens, AIs, clones, corporations, psychics, and mutants, on a quest to avert the apocalypse. Futuro's influences include Neil Gaiman, William Gibson, H.P. Lovecraft, Neal Stephenson, Stephen King, Alan Moore, Robert A. Heinlein, Philip K. Dick, Frank Herbert, and Hugh Howey. Futuro seeks out and devours the best new books on Amazon, especially dark, gritty, and weird stories. His favorite pastime is browsing free books by indie authors and discovering future classics. When he isn't writing or reading, he is preparing for the alien invasion.