Welcome to Gold Eagle Books!

Gold Eagle Books publishes Action Adventure, Paramilitary and Sci-Fi novels.

Our current series include Deathlands, Rogue Angel, Outlanders, The Executioner, Stony Man, and Mack Bolan.








Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Gold Eagle Books and IDW Partnership


Beginning in February 2008 IDW Publishing will be releasing comic book and graphic novel versions of The Executioner and Rogue Angel!

IDW Editor Tom Waltz shares his thoughts on the partnership: "I've been a huge fan of the Mack Bolan prose stories for many years, so I was ecstatic when IDW President Ted Adams gave me the green light to approach Gold Eagle about the Executioner license. Things got even better when Gold Eagle not only showed an excited interest in bringing Bolan's adventures into the comic book realm, but Annja Creed's (a.k.a. Rogue Angel) as well.  Rogue Angel was a new title for me when we started this process, but one I've quickly come to dig as much as the Bolan books, and I'm proud as heck to be part of the team that will bring these fascinating pulp heroes to comic book and graphic novel readers everywhere. Working with Gold Eagle has been wonderful, and our talented creators are churning out awesome stories and artwork. I can't wait for fans, old and new, to see what we have to offer."

IDW Publishing is a division of Idea and Design Works, LLC, a revolutionary creative service company with a wide range of clients. Among its best-selling titles are Hasbro’s THE TRANSFORMERS; Paramount/CBS’s STAR TREK; Fox’s ANGEL; Konami’s METAL GEAR SOLID; and Peter David’s FALLEN ANGEL. IDW’s 30 DAYS OF NIGHT film from Sony Pictures was released last month and was the #1 movie in its first week of release. IDW has other films in development at Dimension Films and Paramount Pictures as well. We're really excited to see Mack and Annja in their hands!

We'll be sharing more details and showcasing the creative teams of both comics in the next few days, so stay tuned for more!

Sunday, October 21, 2007

The New JamesAxler.com


If you haven't been there lately, Ron Miles at www.jamesaxler.com has launched a new version of the site. It's got a clean, streamlined new look. As Ron says, "The book section now lets you find books by series, author, or cover artist, and contains a wealth of new information. There is also a new wiki that all registered users are welcome to contribute to".
The site also still contains the archive and forums. Head over give it a whirl.

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Rogue Angel: God of Thunder hits GraphicAudio


The gang at GraphicAudio have released Rogue Angel: God of Thunder (book 7) in audiobook format this month; click here to hear Annja deal with an attack by unknown figures when she tries to collect a package near her loft.

Also available on The GraphicAudio site are audiobook versions of our Outlanders, Deathlands, Executioner, Mack Bolan, and Stony Man series.

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Author Q+A Update


It's coming soon- honest! These things take time, but we hope to have some interviews happening with various Gold Eagle authors soon. In the meantime, tell us who you want to hear from. What you want to know! Post here, or send your questions to readgoldeagle@hotmail.com

Gold Eagle Books Rocks Comic-Con '07

Better late then never; here are some snaps from Gold Eagle's Comic-Con '07 experience.


Tony and Farah working the booth.


Zombies make their way to the convention.


Outlanders cover artist Cliff Neilson signs a poster of sister company Silhouette's Raintree Trilogy.


Hardcore fans walk the halls.


Reading a free copy of "Rogue Angel: Forbidden City" given out at the booth.


Batman and Robin keepin' it real.


Author Mel Odom patiently signs copies of "Forbidden City" for a huge line-up of fans.


Who doesn't love the Batcar from the 60's TV show?


Cover artist Tim Bradstreet signs his Rogue Angel giveaway posters.


Leaving his very familiar mark.


Meow. Black Cat rocks the pvc.

Special thanks to our booth guests for letting us know they'd be at Comic-Con and dropping by for signings! We hope to make it even bigger and better next year, with more author signings and giveaways.

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

An Excerpt from Rogue Angel: Warrior Spirit


A priceless artifact could restore a family's honor — or destroy everything in its wake. While vacationing in Tokyo, archaeologist Annja Creed is approached by a man who desperately needs her help. Kennichi Ogawa, the last descendant of an ancient warrior family, is trying to locate a stolen artifact. Legend has it that the vajra was mystically endowed by a warrior's spirit to help the Yumegakure-ryu family forever be a source for good. But the vajra could help the forces of evil if it gets into the wrong hands. And now the bloodthirsty Yakuza and a group of hired ninja are after it. As Annja and Kennichi trek through the fog-enshrouded mountains of the Iga province to find the relic, they must also outsmart the vicious Yakuza and ninja who are dangerously close to uncovering the vajra first…and to destroying their competition.

Here's an excerpt:

The fist shot at her face much faster than she'd expected.

Annja Creed felt certain it would impact somewhere along the bridge of her nose, but at the very last second, her body seemed to take over and jerk her head out of the way. The fist sailed through empty air and as it went past, Annja saw the opening she needed. In the blink of an eye, she fired three punches into the attacker's midsection, scoring solid hits with all three.

"Matte!" The referee's voice barked out above the cacophony of the crowd's cheers. Annja stopped, and sweat poured down her face and into the folds of her karate uniform. The gi was stained with the sweat, dust and exertion of the past three hours.

She turned to the judges and waited. Two white flags went into the air.

Annja beamed but contained her joy over winning the match. Instead she executed a formal bow from her waist to the judges. Then she walked to her opponent, a twenty-something punk rocker with tea-stained reddish-brown hair. He was still bent over, looking for the air Annja had knocked out of his lungs.

As she approached, he looked up and frowned. "How did you do that?"

Annja shrugged. "I thought you had me, Saru. But somehow my reflexes kicked in."

"Good fight. I may never breathe again, though." He tried to grin, but grimaced instead. His friends helped him off the traditional tatami mats.

Annja turned and went the other way toward the side where her gear awaited. One more match and she'd be done. But the last fight of the evening was looking to be nothing short of nearly impossible.

She gulped down water and waited for the next opponent to walk onto the mat.

When he did, Annja felt her stomach twist itself into knots. Nezuma Hidetaki was one of the most feared fighters that the Kyokushinkai had ever produced. A hard stylist, Nezuma liked to practice his punches against brick buildings. He'd split his knuckles so often that doctors had finally removed the remaining cartilage and simply sewn the knuckles together. Nezuma had calluses on top of his calluses and though short at only five feet six inches, his thighs were as big around as tree trunks.

He strode across the mat and stood in front of Annja with his arms folded across his barrel chest. "I will not be as easy as Saru was," he stated.

I didn't think Saru was easy, Annja thought.

She took another sip of water and then mopped her brow. The material of her gi top stuck to her skin. She flapped it, trying to get some air circulating so she'd be able to move without getting caught up in it.

Nezuma did some deep squats across the ring, warming up his body. As the reigning champion, he only had to fight one match—the last one.

Annja was already as warm as she was going to get. All that remained before her in this tournament being held in the Tokyo Budokan, was Nezuma. If she won this match, she'd be the lightweight champion in the Interdiscipline Budo Championship.

The judges looked at Annja and she nodded, then stepped onto the mat. Nezuma turned and bowed to the judges. Annja did the same.

Nezuma turned to Annja and gave her a curt bow. Annja bowed in the same style. If he's going to be rude, so be it, she thought. I can play that game, as well.

The referee stepped in between them and held his hand horizontally. He looked at both of them again, but Annja already had her eyes locked on Nezuma's.

"Hajime!"

Nezuma immediately stalkedAnnja, coming at her from the side, almost like a crab.Annja pivoted to her southpaw stance, bringing her guard higher than normal, aware that Nezuma preferred to attack with straight punches aimed at the head, trying to score immediate knockouts. He had successfully knocked out three of his previous opponents on his way to becoming the champion he was—the one Annja hoped to become.

Nezuma shot out a feint with his right leg, a flashing roundhouse kick aimed at her upper thigh. Annja stepped back out of range, letting the kick sail past her. Nezuma's follow-up was a straight blast aimed at her head.

Annja ducked and deflected the blow away to the inside and punched at Nezuma's exposed right chest. He brought his left hand in sharply and punched Annja's arm out of the way. Annja dropped back and away, clutching her arm.

Well, that hurt, she thought. She took a breath and gritted her teeth. Let's see how he likes this.

Against all her normal strategic thinking,Annja jumped and let a bloodcurdling shout erupt from her lungs as she folded her legs up and under her, aiming her left foot at Nezuma's head.

The jumping side kick caught her stocky opponent by surprise, and he barely missed losing his head to Annja's kick. Annja landed, aware that Nezuma was already punching at exactly the spot where she'd be landing. Instead of standing, Annja let the momentum drop her to the ground and then pivoted and swept Nezuma's legs out from under him. He went down hard and the judges scored it one point for Annja.

Just two more to go, she thought as Nezuma hauled himself to a standing position again.

He glared at Annja.

No way is he going to fall for that again, Annja thought with a smile. Still, it was worth it seeing the look of surprise on his face. Especially since she knew that Nezuma was a notorious misogynist who thought women belonged either in bed or in the kitchen, preferably both.

The referee barked at them to begin again, and Annja and Nezuma squared off. budo."

After her last adventure, she'd needed a vacation. More than that, she'd wanted to test herself. And the martial-arts newsgroup she sometimes frequented had posted news about the upcoming tournament. It seemed a perfect time to do something for herself, so she made her travel arrangements from her loft in Brooklyn. Within twelve hours, she was hopping a flight bound for Tokyo.

Fourteen hours later, she arrived and went straight to her hotel and fell asleep, trying to get her system in tune with the time-zone change.

And now, here she stood, awaiting Nezuma's final attack. Her nerves seemed poised at the edge of a very steep cliff, ready to jump at a moment's notice. Even the sweat seemed to be still wherever it was on her body.

Nezuma's eyes glistened like those of a ravenous tiger about to consume an antelope he'd pursued and had cornered. Annja's stomach still ached, but her breathing had returned to normal.

For the last time the referee stepped between them. Once more, he looked at them both.

Annja nodded.

Nezuma grinned. "Hajime!"

The crowd roared and hopped to its feet. Shouts and cheers echoed across the cavernous room as Annja circled Nezuma. The Kyokushinkai fighter smiled and then roared as he launched a high roundhouse kick toward Annja's left temple. Annja stepped inside and started to drop to punch into Nezuma's groin.

This'll teach him, she thought.

But in that instant, Nezuma recoiled his kick and then shot his left arm out, clotheslining Annja across the throat in an aikido move known as irimi nage, the entering throw.

Annja felt the pressure on her throat and knew that if the throw finished, she'd be defeated.

Instead, she grabbed Nezuma's arm and used it to vault herself over like a gymnast. As she spun over, she kicked out with both feet at Nezuma's chest.

He sidestepped and shot a punch at Annja's head. Annja ducked out of the way and the two of them broke apart again.

Sweat poured down both of their faces. Annja blinked through the salt and kept her guard up. Her arms felt like lead weights, dragging her down, but she was all too aware of how prizefighters often tire. Once the guard started to drop, the other fighter usually had no problem finishing them off. Annja was determined to not let that happen. Especially since she'd spent enough time listening to her self-appointed trainer, Eddie, harp on her about keeping her hands up where they could protect her.

Nezuma's guard had stayed perfectly in position throughout the entire fight. His arms looked like coils of tight sinew wrapped around steel girders. He still maneuvered on deeply bent legs, keeping his center of balance low and steady. Trying to unseat him would be almost impossible.

He screamed again and came at Annja with a series of stomping kicks aimed at her midsection. He looked as if he was taking giant steps across the mat, and Annja had to sidestep them again and again.

This is ridiculous, she thought. It's time I went on the attack.

She turned and launched a single roundhouse kick at Nezuma's head. He casually flicked it away and in that instant, Annja went low, driving her elbow toward Nezuma's stomach.

He blocked that, as well. Annja came up, driving up with an uppercut aimed at the underside of his jaw. Nezuma pivoted out of the way and then dropped unexpectedly to the floor. She felt the crushing instep of Nezuma's right foot sink into her stomach and then lift her up overhead. When it was fully extended, Nezuma retracted his right foot, but Annja kept sailing through the air, tumbling as she went like in some bad kung fu movie.

She crashed to the floor in a broken heap just as the judges raised their red flags.

Nezuma had won the match.

Annja got to her feet, determined not to lie there like a beaten fool. Even though her stomach ached as if someone had just used a spoon to scoop out her insides, she bowed to the judges and then to Nezuma.

"Next time," she said through gritted teeth.

Nezuma smiled.

Annja hobbled over to her bag and drank down some of the last remaining water in her bottle. The crowd at the budokan was still cheering Nezuma and he soaked up the adoration. He bowed several times and then left the mat. The spectators left soon after, filing out in the same orderly way as they had come into the budokan.

Annja sat there for another few minutes, catching her breath. She sucked at the bottle and realized that she was out of the precious fluid. "Here."

She looked up and into the deepest, darkest eyes she'd seen on a man. He held out a fresh bottle of water and smiled.

Wow, Annja thought. "Thanks," was all she could say. "That was some fight. You held your own against him remarkably well."

"Remarkably well? What's that supposed to mean?"

-------

Rogue Angel: Warrior Spirit hits bookstores on November 6th and features the first cover of new ongoing cover artist Tim Bradstreet.

Friday, August 31, 2007

Mack Bolan: American Hero by George Koukeas


George Koukeas' insightful article covering Mack Bolan was sent to us by a Gold Eagle fan recently. Check it out below:

Years ago, I read and enjoyed Ayn Rand’s novels, The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged. Rand’s characters were unconventional and talented. I never thought I’d find another book, let alone a series of them, that featured another unconventional hero.

Then I discovered Don Pendleton’s Executioner novels. The hero this time around was Mack Bolan.

Like Howard Roark and John Galt, Mack Bolan also possesses a gift. He is an ex-Vietnam veteran whose talent is for warfare, strategizing, and resourcefulness. By attributing this gift to his character, Pendleton presents Bolan as a “beat-the-odds” American soldier who has philosophical musings in-between battles.

Bolan’s personal courage, integrity, and commitment to his mission surpass his contemporaries. Most of all, his unconventional sense of morality leads him to fight a literal one-man war against the Mafia.

In his first adventure, War Against the Mafia (1969), a 30-year old Bolan returns home from Vietnam for the funeral of his family — victims of a Pennsylvania Mob outfit. When Bolan discovers the true extent of mafia corruption in America, his soldier’s sense of responsibility motivates him to fight the mafia as a means of protecting our country.

The mafia eventually responds by playing rough. Because Bolan cannot back down without betraying his moral and patriotic values, he wages a highly offensive, proactive war.

Hence, Bolan’s moral sense places him on a path that defies society’s legal conventions. Because the mafia’s power and influence have immunized its members from legal prosecution, Bolan takes the law into his own hands in order to destroy the mob.

Doing what Rand did for Atlas Shrugged’s “pirate,” Ragnar Danneskjold, Pendleton provides a good man with a moral justification for fighting criminal violence violently. Despite this justification for his actions, the cops try apprehending Bolan for “vigilante” activity.

Bolan, then, not only executes offensives against ruthless mafia thugs but also has to elude police that pose a threat to his life and mission. Nevertheless, Bolan never fires upon cops (or civilians) and is motivated primarily by compassion for victims and not by hatred of the enemy.

Though Bolan goes “solo” on his missions, he is sometimes assisted by helicopter pilot Jack Grimaldi, Federal cop Harold Brognola, and other interesting secondary characters.

Like Rand’s fiction, Pendleton’s 38 Executioner books are sprinkled with philosophy. Pendleton explores the deeper meanings of life and, what he called, the “metaphysics of violence” (i.e. why violence exists in the world and what its role is).

On one level, Bolan’s conscientious battle against crime represents one of the series’ morals about life: that life is most meaningful when a person meets, struggles through, and defeats life’s challenges.

Though he experiences in microcosm the tragedies of war, Bolan’s psychological strength and conviction enable him to persist in his war and maintain his humanity. This is one of the series’ elements that I as well as many readers relate to: The Executioner stories are an analogy for overcoming life’s challenges with a commitment to values, without becoming callous or bitter towards life.

Pendleton, through Bolan, seems to argue that because life is sacred, it is worth the struggle. The fact that Bolan finds meaning in his experiences and prevails through perseverance and commitment serves as an inspiring lesson. Unlike the philosophical comprehensiveness of Atlas Shrugged, Pendleton’s philosophy is expressed in “pieces” spread across 38 books and revealed through the same character.

The Executioner stories reveal Bolan’s effectiveness in restoring Justice. In the long-term, Bolan succeeds — as an individual — where most legal bureaucracies have failed. Likewise, Galt and Roark also demonstrate the power of the individual.

Other similarities exist between Pendleton’s and Rand’s characters that further illuminate Bolan’s character. For example, Dagny Taggert, in Atlas Shrugged, mistakenly views Francisco D’ Anconia as “unprincipled” before discovering they are on the same side.

Similarly, federal cop, Hal Brognola, tries shooting Bolan on sight as a dangerous “criminal” before being won over by Bolan’s nobility. The two men become allies in fighting crime and develop a deep friendship.

Furthermore, just as Howard Roark inspires Dominique and Gail Wynand to change their views on life, Mack Bolan has a similar effect on the other characters in the series.

After completing his 38-book series, Pendleton trained other writers to continue Mack’s adventures. Eventually, Mack Bolan moved from fighting mafia criminals to fighting Communist Russia in the 1980s. Today, Bolan fights America’s war on terror.

Some of the writers Pendleton trained have a good grasp of the character while others make semi-erroneous characterizations. Some of the better writers have stand-out books, such as Line of Control (2003) and its sequel Breached (2003), that present Bolan as accurately and as grandly as Pendleton did.

Newcomers to the series who want a good understanding of who Mack Bolan is would enjoy these books. Or, even better, look for Don Pendleton’s original series in used bookstores.

_______
George Koukeas is a freelance writer based in Colorado who has written for magazines, websites and the occasional newspaper. He is currently working on a series of articles focusing on Frontier history and related tourist spots in the West.

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Sparked by Paranoia, Fueled by Fear...



As revealed at San Diego's Comic-Con, ROOM 59 is Gold Eagle's brand-new thriller/adventure series launching in January 2008.

The Players: ROOM 59 is a multinational policing agency sanctioned to terminate global threats that governments can’t touch. Its high-level operatives are seasoned in the dangerous game of espionage and counterterrorism. A Room 59 mission puts everything on the line; emotions run high, and so does the body count.

Written by Cliff Ryder, each ROOM 59 novel is a stand-alone story featuring intricate plots, thrilling action, nail-biting suspense and the timeless battle of good and evil.


The first book of the series is THE POWERS THAT BE: When a double agent in Cuba suddenly disappears, there’s concern that he might have gone rogue, working against ROOM 59 and the world at large. But one of the agency’s top spymasters has a blood tie to the operative in question, which leaves him with an agonizing choice: allow the mission to be scrubbed, and leave thousands to die in the resulting bloodbath—or risk everything he knows, including his career, to keep his secret deeply buried.

ROOM 59: The Powers That Be will be in stores January 2008.

Friday, August 3, 2007

An excerpt from Rogue Angel: Secret of the Slaves


Pain jabbed the muscle of Annja Creed's right forearm as she slammed it into the hardwood limb jutting from the trunk-like pole before her.

Good, she thought savagely. She slammed a palm into the slick-polished wood of the trunk itself even as her left forearm blocked into another protrusion.

Faster and faster her hands moved, in and out, over and under the blunt wooden posts stuck in sockets on the central pole. She practiced blocks, traps, strikes with stiffened fingers and fists and palms. A drumbeat rose as muscle and bone met wood with jarring impact.

Annja was a tall, fit woman in her midtwenties. She wore a green sports bra and gray shorts. The humming air conditioner kept her Brooklyn loft cool.

She paused to brush away a vagrant strand of chestnut hair that had worked loose from the bun she had pinned it in. Her scowl deepened.

The stout wooden apparatus rocked to a palm-heel thrust, despite the fact its wide base was weighed down by heavy sandbags. Annja's sparring partner was a training dummy used as an adjunct to wing chun style gongfu. She had taken up the study because it was supposed to be highly effective and easy to learn, while giving her another option for nonlethal use of force.

She had plenty of lethal options available. The deadliest was currently invisible to the naked eye. But it was not intangible, not like her rapier-quick intellect or boundless resourcefulness, which she knew could be as deadly as any physical weapons.

She whipped the back of her right hand against a wooden arm. She let the hand flop over it in a trapping move, fired a punch that made the post rock. As she worked into a blinding-fast pattern of blocks and strikes, all oriented toward the centerline of the post, as they would be to the centerline of an opponent's torso, she found herself worrying about the turn her life had taken.

She thought about the sword—her sword. She had learned that it had once belonged to Joan of Arc. And that she was the inheritor of the long-ago martyr's mantle. On a research trip to France she had, seemingly by chance, found the final piece of St. Joan's sword, broken to pieces by the English captors who burned her. At more or less the same time she had met the man named Roux. He was spry for his gray beard—and even sprier for the fact he claimed Joan had been protégée. He and his apprentice Garin Braden had failed to rescue her from execution. As a result they had been cursed—or blessed—with agelessness.

Roux had spent the half millennium since Joan's death trying to reassemble the saint's shattered sword. At first he'd regarded Annja as an interloper and tried to steal the final fragment from her. Yet when she came into the presence of the other pieces, in Roux's chateau in France, the sword had spontaneously reforged itself at her touch.

It was a bitter pill for a lifelong rationalist to swallow. Especially one who made most of her income as the resident skeptic on the notably credulous cable series Chasing History's Monsters, on the Knowledge Channel.

Her arms and hands now moved too fast for the eye to follow. The tough, seasoned hardwood creaked and strained to the mounting fury of her blows. Human bone would give way long before that old wood did.

The sword. It had come to dominate her life.

It rested now in its accustomed location—what she thought of as the otherwhere. It was not present in this world, except at her command. To summon it, she had learned, all she needed was to form a hand as if to grasp its hilt, and exert her will. And her hand was filled.

But her life, it seemed, had correspondingly emptied since the sword came into it.

Sweat soaked her hair and flew from her face. Her wrists and knuckles and elbows sounded like machinegun fire as they struck the muk-jong.

Orphaned at an early age, raised at an orphanage in New Orleans, Annja had always been alone. She was always apart, somehow, different, although she never tried to be. And it didn't often bother her.

She had never felt as if she couldn't enjoy companionship. But she didn't actively seek it. She'd had close friends at college, on digs, among the crew of Chasing History's Monsters. She had had lovers. But, she had to admit, no truly lasting loves.

And now she figured she never would. At least so long as she bore her illustrious predecessor's sacred sword.

She was an archaeologist. Her period of concentration was the later Middle Ages and Renaissance Europe. She spoke all the major modern Romance languages, and Latin, and studied any number of archaic forms—and weapons.

She wasn't sure why she was feeling a sudden gap in her life left by the lack of a lasting relationship. She had her mentor, Roux, and her sometime enemy, Garin. But she didn't really think those relationships counted. She didn't want them to.

Great, she thought as she slammed her forearms against the projecting limbs. She recognized the rare feeling she was experiencing.

"I'm lonely!" she said to her empty loft. She slammed an elbow smash into the upright on the last word. It broke free from its base and toppled backward. "Nice," she said in disgust. She rubbed her elbow, the pain corresponding to her mood. "Those things cost money."

She stomped off to the shower.

ANNJA EMERGED from the bathroom wearing a long bathrobe swirled in patterns of green, yellow and blue. Her long hair was wrapped in a towel. She heated a cup of cocoa in the microwave and looked around her loft. While jobs were scarce for a freelance archaeologist, she had lucked into enough supplementary income from her television gig and some publishing deals to afford the space.

With Roux's assistance she sometimes accepted commissions to do special archaeological assignments around the globe—always consistent with her strict sense of scientific ethics—for employers who wanted them kept discreet. They tended to be a lot more perilous than the usual university dig, and accordingly well compensated. Sometimes only just slightly over the considerable expense such missions tended to incur.

Flopping on her couch in the space left by several piles of manuscripts various contacts had sent her, mostly dealing with her side interest in fringe archaeology, she made the key mistake of clicking on the television.

She was hoping for a distraction. What she got was Kristie Chatham, on location with some kind of cockamamy Knowledge Channel crossover production in England. Annja was all too aware of not having been invited to take part.

"…standing here in front of Stonehenge," Kristie was saying brightly, "which as we all know was built by the Druids…"

Annja emitted a strangled scream and threw a cushion at the screen. "No, you bimbo," she shouted. "No, no, no. Stonehenge was built thousands of years before the Druids. Don't you bother to research anything?" A better question might've been, didn't the Knowledge Channel fact-check anything? But she knew the answer to that one, too.

"I'm here with Reggie Whitcomb of the South England Pagan Federation," Kristie bubbled on, "who's going to explain how the Druids levitated the huge cross-pieces, called sarsen stones, into place using their advanced psychic powers."

Annja grabbed the remote and clicked off the set just as Kristie turned her microphone toward a chinless guy wearing a white robe with a peaked hood that made him look as if he belonged to a middle-school auxiliary of the Ku Klux Klan. The skies were black over Salisbury Plain, and the wind cracked like wet sheets whipping on a clothesline. Annja hoped Kristie would get struck by lightning. Or at least soaked to the skin.

Of course that would make Kristie's sheer white blouse transparent.And Kristie would score another topviewed video on YouTube. Unlike a lot of its media rivals, the Knowledge Channel never set its legal hounds to pull such videos down—the producers had noticed how ratings spiked for their repeats after one went online.

Annja slammed her remote on top of a stack of printouts on the couch beside her.

"It's not like I'm Ms. Establishment Science or anything," she muttered, with her chin down to her clavicle. "It's just that I don't open my mind so wide my brain rolls out my mouth."

Her cell phone rang and she frowned at it in suspicion. If that's Doug Morrell, his head's coming right off, she thought.

She picked it up, flipped it open. "Hello." "Annja Creed?"

Whomever the voice belonged to, it was not her producer from Chasing History's Monsters. The voice was like liquid amber poured over gravel—deep, rugged, yet somehow flowing.

Her eyes narrowed. I know that voice, she thought. It sounds so familiar.

"Ms. Creed?" She was certain of the Irish accent.

"Oh. Yeah. Sorry. This is Annja."

"Ms. Creed, my name is Iain Moran. I'm a musician. You may have heard of me."

"Sir Iain Moran?" Annja asked. It couldn't be.

"The same." Her mind's eye could see that famous smile, at once roguish and world-weary.

"Publico? Lead singer for T-34?"

"The very one."

"Right," Annja was in no mood for pranks.

"Don't hang up! Please. I really am Sir Iain Moran." "Sure. Multibillionaire rock stars call me every day. If Doug Morrell put you up to this, you're both way overdue for a good swift kick to the—"

"Please. I'd very much like to consult you on a professional matter, concerning your expertise. Would it help to assuage your doubts if my helicopter collected you on the roof of your flat in fifteen minutes?"

It was original, as pranks go. She had to give her caller that. "You're on," Annja said, daring her caller to push this as far as it would go.

Fifteen minutes later she stared openmouthed into the brownish haze of a hot Brooklyn day. Her face and hair were whipped by the downblast as a Bell 429 helicopter descended to the roof.


~ Secret of the Slaves will be available in bookstores September 11th, 2007.

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Gold Eagle Books at Comic-Con 2007

Gold Eagle Books returns to Comic-Con in San Diego, from July 26th to July 29th, 2007. This year we're continuing our Free Books theme, as well as featuring special signing events with authors and artists. You can find us at booth #1220 amidst the madness.

Mel Odom (one of our authors working under the Alex Archer pseudonym) will be signing free copies of his book Rogue Angel: Forbidden City at the booth on Friday July 27th from 3:30pm to 4:30pm. Mel has written an excess of a hundred books, won awards (The Alex Award, and Christy Award), and has been inducted to the Oklahoma Professional Writer's Hall of Fame. He is also a father of five and a little league baseball and basketball coach.


On Saturday, July 28, 2007, cover artist Tim Bradstreet will be signing free posters of his cover art for Rogue Angel: Warrior Spirit from 3:00 p.m. to 4:00 pm. Primarily a self-taught illustrator, Tim has spent the last 17 years illustrating everything, including trading cards and covers for DC Comics, Marvel Comics, Dark Horse Comics and is Art Director of Raw Entertainment. Tim and wife Missy reside in San Diego, California.

Also on Saturday, cover artist Cliff Neilsen (known around these parts for his stunning art on our Outlanders series covers) will be signing free posters of Raintree: Inferno, his recent Nocturne cover for our sister imprint, Silhouette books, from 11:00 a.m. until 12 noon. Cliff's illustrations have been recognized for their excellence by the Society of Illustrators, Print and Spectrum. Cliff has been an international speaker on digital art and has served as a judge for the Society of Illustrators and a variety of professional illustration award programs. He lives and dreams in Los Angeles, California.


We'll also be giving away books from The Executioner, Deathlands and Mack Bolan book series. We'd love to say hello to you- drop over to 1220 and snag some swag!

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

An Excerpt from Outlanders: Satan's Seed



The Tatra Range, Slovakia, 2203

Kane watched the line of distant round lights gently bobbing. Despite the fur lining of his parka’s hood, he heard the steady rumble of powerful engines.

Pushing the goggles up on his forehead, Kane raised a compact set of binoculars and peered through the eyepieces, sweeping them over the bleak, almost monochromatic terrain. The sky to the east showed the pastel colors of dawn. Shadows of the Carpathians and the pinnacle of the Gerlachov Peak acquired sharp outlines against the swiftly growing brightness.

Flurries blew in from the north, a melange of snow, ice and sleet flung by a polar wind across the rocky wilderness. Kane cursed through clenched teeth as the sharp-edged ice particles stung his exposed face. The wind fell as suddenly and as dramatically as it had risen, leaving a feathery swirl of wet snowflakes eddying through the air.

The weather for the past two centuries had always been unpredictable, but usually summers even in the high altitudes eased into a few weeks of autumn. Here in mountainous Eastern Europe, summer plunged straight into winter without a pause, but at least he felt appropriately dressed. He wore several layers of clothing—thermal underwear, a sweater, a fur-lined parka and heavy Thermax pants. Specially designed snow boots encased his feet, and chemically warmed protective gauntlets covered his hands.

Beneath the outer layers he was clad in a one-piece black garment that fitted as tightly as doeskin gloves. The coverall was known as a shadow suit.

Although the suit did not appear as if it could offer protection from a mosquito bite, it was climate controlled for environments that reached highs of one hundred and fifty degrees and as cold as minus ten degrees Fahrenheit. Microfilaments controlled the internal temperature. Kane guessed the current, predawn temperature hovered around minus five.

Kane scraped frost from the ruby-coated lenses of his binoculars with a gloved forefinger, but the curtains of snow prevented a clear view of the convoy of vehicles. He knew they chugged overland from the direction of Gerlachov Peak, but the District Twelve intel provided by Major Zuryakin had informed him of that two days ago.
The transcomm in Kane’s inner breast pocket chirped. He reached inside his parka, twisting a knob on its surface. “Go ahead.”

“We count five,” said Major Illyana Zuryakin. “Five heavy-duty mil-spec vehicles. They appear to be armored
and armed.”

Kane grunted noncommittally, squinting toward the bobbing headlights.

“Does that trouble you, Kane?” Illyana Zuryakin spoke impeccable English and her mastery of subtle nuances, like sarcasm, was pitch-perfect, as well.

“Hell yes, it troubles me,” Kane snapped. “The only reason I’m standing out here freezing my ass in the first place is because it troubles me. Any sign of personnel?”

“Nyet, but our intelligence indicated there are over a dozen well-armed men in the party, possibly more.”

Kane refrained from commenting sourly on the relative trustworthiness of District Twelve intel. Instead, he said, “The Cerberus sat photo sweep picked up at least two dozen well-armed men.”

“So?” The major’s one-word retort was both a dismissal and a challenge.

“So,” Kane replied inanely, “I’m just saying.”

The trans-comm accurately conveyed the woman’s sigh of exasperation. “Your liaison, Brigid Baptiste, was right.”

Kane stiffened reflexively. “About what?”

“About what it was like working with you.”

Kane didn’t even bother to repress the irritation in his tone. “What’s that supposed to mean?”

“You can ask herself when we rendezvous.” Major Zuryakin’s voice held a flinty edge. “Get the rest of your
team together and meet us at the strike point. We haven’t much time. Understood?”

Kane bit back a profane reply. “Understood.”

Venting an impatient sigh, he peered through the binoculars again. Despite the fact that the snowfall was thinning, he still couldn’t make out much of the convoy except shapes.

Tall and lean, long and rangy of limb, Kane resembled a wolf in the way he carried most of his muscle mass in his upper body. His thick dark hair, showing just enough chestnut highlights to keep it from being a true black, stirred in the chill breeze. A faint hairline scar stretched like a piece of white thread against the sunbronzed, clean-shaved skin of his left cheek. His pale blue-gray eyes held the color of the cold dawn light on a sharp steel blade.

He gave the three-pound block of C-4 a final visual inspection, made sure the detonation cap was secure and glanced around at the tumbles of snow-layered stone. After reassuring himself for the third time that the demolition charge was planted in the right place, Kane turned away.

Below him, in an overhung niche, rose a copse of snow-dusted pines. He picked his way down a steep, treacherous path toward the niche, avoiding thornbushes to the right and frost-sheathed outcroppings of granite on his left.

When he reached the tree line, he heard a faint rustle, and from the corner of his eye he glimpsed the snow-plastered bark of a pine shedding a white flurry. Automatically Kane fell into a crouch, stiffening his right wrist tendons. Sensitive actuators clicked and with a faint, brief drone of a tiny electric motor, the butt of his Sin Eater slapped into his hand.

The official side arm of the defunct Magistrate Divisions, the Sin Eater was strapped to a holster on his right forearm. The 9 mm autopistol had no safety or trigger guard, so when the firing stud came in contact with a crooked index finger, it fired immediately. However, Kane kept his finger extended and out of contact with the trigger stud.

For a crazed instant, he thought the tree was uprooting itself, tearing itself free of the frozen ground to clutch at him with skeletal branches. He sprang to one side, barely able to bite back a cry of alarm, raising the Sin Eater.

Gusting out a profanity, he lowered it almost immediately when he realized Domi, her white face and white parka forming a perfect camouflage, had stepped out from the hollow of the tree to meet him.

“For God’s sake,” he blurted, embarrassed and angry because of it. His breath formed a cloud of steam before
his eyes. “Why didn’t you say something?”

Her angular, hollow-cheeked face twisted in annoyed puzzlement. “Like what? You knew this was my position.”
Domi’s skin was as smoothly pale as porcelain. An albino by birth, the girl’s bone-white hair was cropped short and spiky, her eyes the bright color of polished rubies.

Every inch of five feet tall, Domi barely weighed one hundred pounds, and at first glance she gave the impression of being waiflike. But there wasn’t much of the waif about her compactly lithe body, what little of it could be discerned beneath her bulky cold-weather gear.

“Never mind,” he snapped.

“You sure are getting jumpy in your old age,” Domi observed cheerfully. “And grumpy.”

Shoving the Sin Eater back into its holster, he retorted sarcastically, “With the kind of coworkers I have, I can’t imagine why. Let’s go.”

The two people sidled through the close-growing trees to the edge of the road. Little more than a trench gouged through the snowfield, it tracked up and over a rise a quarter of a mile to the east. The sound of multiple engines steadily increased in volume.

“Still think this was a mistake,” Domi declared, her childlike voice sharp and petulant. “Letting Russkies
run this op ’stead of our own people.”

“Yeah, so you’ve said,” Kane replied casually. “About twenty times since yesterday and thirty times the day before yesterday.”
“Got our own specialists now,” Domi said doggedly. “Don’t need no stinkin’ Russkies.”

Kane blew out a steamy plume of breath in an exasperated sigh. “This is their territory, and they were already onto the Millennial Consortium before we arrived. So, yes, we do need those stinkin’ Russkies.”

“And they need us,” interjected a deep, rumbling voice from behind them. “Just as much if not more.”

Domi and Kane turned to see a big figure looming in the shadowy lee of a craggy overhang. Grant stood six-feet-five-inches tall in his thick-soled jump boots, and like Kane and Domi he wore a hooded white parka. The spread of his shoulders on either side of his thickly corded neck was very broad. Because his body was all knotted sinew and muscle covered by deep brown flesh, he did not look his weight of 250 pounds.

His short-cropped hair was touched with gray at the temples, but it did not show in the gunfighter’s mustache that swept out fiercely around both sides of his tight-lipped mouth. He held a Copperhead close-assault subgun in his hands. Under two feet long, it looked like a toy within his grasp. Equipped with an extended magazine holding thirty-five 4.85 mm steel jacketed rounds, the weapon possessed a 700-round-per-minute rate of fire. The grip and trigger unit were placed in front of the breech in the bullpup design, allowing for onehanded use.

An optical image intensifier scope and laser autotargeter were mounted on the top of the frame. Low recoil allowed the Copperhead to be fired in a long, devastating, full-auto burst that could empty the magazine in seconds.

As Grant stepped out from beneath the overhang, he said, “I’m not forgetting the way we were doublecrossed the last time we worked with the Russians.”

Grant’s oblique reminders to events nearly five years before hadn’t become as repetitious as Domi’s complaints, but the big man’s objections to teaming up with Major Zuryakin were hardly new.

“Sverdlovosk was a rogue District Twelve agent,” Kane said. “We can’t judge the entire organization by that bastard.”

“Why not?” Grant challenged.

“It’s too damn late for one thing,” Kane shot back.

“Besides, could you judge all of the Magistrate Divisions by me and you?”

When no response was forthcoming, Kane continued. “We’ve already agreed to let Zuryakin and her D-12 troops run the show. We pull out now, it’s a shit-serious diplomatic screwup we’ll never recover from. We’re going to need their resources against the overlords.”

Both Domi and Grant scowled at him but said nothing. They knew Kane spoke the truth, even if they didn’t like it. Diplomacy, turning potential enemies into allies against the spreading reign of the overlords, had become the paramount tactic of Cerberus over the past couple of years.

Lessons in how to deal with foreign cultures and religions took the place of weapons instruction and other training. Over the past several years, Domi, Brigid Baptiste and former Cobaltville Magistrates Grant and Kane had tramped through jungles, ruined cities, over mountains, across deserts and they found strange cultures everywhere, often bizarre recreations of societies that had vanished long before the nuclear holocaust.

All the personnel of Cerberus, nearly half a world away atop a mountain peak in Montana, had devoted themselves to changing the nuke-scarred planet into something better. At least that was their earnest hope. To turn hope into reality meant respecting the often alien behavior patterns of a vast number of ancient religions, legends, myths and taboos.

With a resigned grunt, Grant said, “Let’s get going. The trigger is set.”

As he stepped away from the overhang, a pale thread of violet light bisected a drift of powdery snow. The photoelectric cell affixed to a shelf of stone served as the trigger for a proximity detonator. An explosive charge had been planted high on the roadside as an insurance policy in case any of the convoy broke through the ambush.

As the three people slogged through the packed snow banked up on the side of the channel, Grant muttered sullenly, “You know, it was a lot easier when we shot whoever gave us the stink-eye without worrying about diplomacy.”

“Yeah,” Domi chirped with a crooked grin. “The good old days.”

Kane understood and sympathized with his partner’s discomfort even though themanwas exaggerating their former methods of operation. He didn’t trust the Russians, either. Until he, Grant and Brigid visited the country on their first official op for Cerberus, no one knew if the place even existed as a cohesive culture and nation.

Like most intercontinental locations, Russia was a big mystery—except to the Russians, who weren’t providing information. The few scraps of intel that had leaked out since the atomic megacull of 2001 had to be assembled like a jigsaw puzzle with most of the pieces missing.

Moscow had been hit very hard, as had most of the other Russian industrial cities. The entire country had suffered through skydark, the nuclear winter, like the rest of the nuke-ravaged planet, but because of its extreme northern latitudes, it was believed that for more than thirty years, temperatures rarely rose above ten degrees Fahrenheit. Speculation had it that more Russians died during skydark than during the actual holocaust.

When the Cerberus team arrived in the country nearly five years before, they learned the massive loss of life that came as an aftermath of the day-long war two centuries before was not a speculative matter. They had also been introduced, very unpleasantly, to District Twelve, the ultrasecret arm of Russia’s internal security network.

Coming to a halt at the base of a snow-covered outcropping, Kane looked around, very aware of the growl of multiple engines floating above the crest of the rise. “Where the hell is everybody?” he muttered.

“Here.”

Kane turned in the direction of Major Zuryakin’s voice. The snowbanked high on both sides of the road dislodged a dozen figures. The District Twelve operatives were attired in identical white snowsuits that covered them from head to toe, their faces concealed by white knit balaclavas. Their zippered pockets bulged with equipment, giving them a distinct resemblance to albino walruses.

Zuryakin had mentioned that all D-12 field troopers were trained to live rough—they carried no sleeping bags, and anything pertaining to their survival that couldn’t be jammed into a pocket or a small haversack was abandoned. Each operative carried a black, very utilitarian AKSU subgun.

Major Zuryakin herself wasn’t a particularly tall woman, but she was broadly built with chunky hips and thick thighs. Unmistakably unfeminine, her hair was cropped to little more than a skullcap of silvery bristles. A white leather patch covered her left eye, and her right gleamed with the pale gray hue of Arctic ice.

“Took you long enough,” she said reprovingly.

Grant frowned. “How do you figure that?”

From a pocket, the major fished out a silver flask. She stepped toward them, uncapping it. “Because the vodka is almost boiling from being so close to my pizda for so long. Have a breakfast drink, tovarisches…it might be your last opportunity.”


~ Satan's Seed will be in bookstores August 7th, 2007.

Friday, June 22, 2007

Rogue Angel Continues to Rock Fans in Audiobook Format


The gang at GraphicAudio are continuing to create audiobook versions of our Rogue Angel novels. Rogue Angel: The Spider Stone (book 3) and Rogue Angel: The Chosen (book 4) are both available on their site now; click here to listen to Annja kick ass in her hotel bedroom in book 3.

Nogoodcards gave the third book 4 out of 5 stars, saying "This one to date is my favorite of the Rogue Angel series. It has a good balance of Annja being both the archeologist and Rogue Angel. I don't want to go into to much detail and ruin the plot but the mystery is a good one and the spider stone must go home."

Also available on The GraphicAudio site are audiobook versions of our Deathlands, Executioner, Mack Bolan, Stony Man and Outlanders series.

Sunday, June 10, 2007

An Excerpt from Rogue Angel: God of Thunder


The four men approached Annja Creed like a well-oiled machine. Their actions told her they'd done this before.

She didn't break stride or change direction, heading toward the Mailboxes & Stuff store that she used to mail and receive packages. In her career as an archaeologist, she often received items for study and sometimes for authentication. A handful of museums and private collectors paid her to do certificates of authenticity on items they were putting on display.

Although everything added up, payment for the certificates wasn't much. However, the benefits included free access to those museums and private collections, and the goodwill of curators who were valuable sources of information when she was doing research.

The four men moved with determination, without speaking. They were young and athletic, casually dressed and instantly forgettable. She guessed that they had military training.

Everything's already been planned, Annja thought. Adrenaline spiked within her, elevating her heart rate and her senses. She stayed within the flow of the lunch crowd flooding out of the buildings onto the street. Everyone was hurrying to try to make it back on time.

She knew the four men had been waiting for her, and wondered if they had followed her from her loft. She hadn't been home in weeks. A dig in Florida had consumed her and given her a brief respite from the dregs of winter that still hovered over New York. She'd quickly dropped off luggage and headed back out.

Layered in dark winter clothing—a thigh-length navy wool coat, sweater over a long-sleeved top, and Levi's, with a knitted black beanie and wraparound blue-tinted sunglasses, her backpack slung over one shoulder—Annja figured the team had watched her closely to recognize her. But at five feet ten and with chestnut-colored hair that dipped below her shoulders, she forgot she had a tendency to stand out in a crowd.

Nikolai, the manager at the shipping business, had left messages with her answering service to let her know she had a number of packages waiting for pickup.

So why hadn't they picked her up at the airport? Annja mulled that over and realized that they weren't law-enforcement personnel. Maybe they hadn't wanted to draw attention to themselves.

Then why hadn't they nabbed her at her loft? If they knew about Mailboxes & Stuff, they surely knew where she lived. That thought led to a whole new line of questions.

Although it stunk to the high heavens, the situation made Annja curious, and curiosity had driven her through most of her life.

Annja took her cell phone out of her pocket and punched in numbers.

"Mailboxes & Stuff," a friendly male voice answered.

"This is Nikolai. How may I help you?" His Russian accent was charming, but Annja knew it was fake. Nikolai had been born and raised in Brooklyn.

"It's Annja."

"Ah, Annja, it is so good to hear from you." Nikolai lowered his voice to a conspiratorial tone. "You would not believe what has been going on."

Annja stopped at the newsstand at the corner across the street from Mailboxes & Stuff. She waited in line as customers ahead of her picked out newspapers, magazines and snacks.

Checking the reflections in the windows of the nearby coffee shop, Annja watched the four men attempt to lose themselves in the crowd of pedestrians. If she hadn't already made them, she knew she wouldn't have noticed them.

"So tell me," Annja invited.

"A man came into the store," Nikolai said. "He showed me government credentials and claimed that he needed a package that was supposed to be delivered to you."

The newsstand owner dealt with his clientele quickly. The line shrank faster than Annja wanted.

"What kind of credentials?" Annja asked.

"I don't know. I didn't get a good look. They tried to intimidate me. Something with a photograph and badge."

"Do you remember his name?"

"Agent Smith." Nikolai cackled. "I thought it was very humorous. I asked him if he'd seen The Matrix."

Nikolai was a die-hard science fiction fan. He spoke Klingon and was constantly trying to teach phrases to Annja.

"What did he do?" Annja asked.

"He was not amused. Then he threatened me. So I told him he had to have a court order before I gave any package to him. He didn't produce a court order," Nikolai said. "So I called the police."

"You called the police?"

"Sure. I'm not going to play around with them. You get expensive things here, Annja, but you're not the only client I have that does."

"Right. So what did Agent Smith do?"

"What did he do? He left is what he did."

"Did the police come?"

"An hour or so later, sure. Evidently my call wasn't very important."

"Did you file a report?"

"I did. But I kept your name out of it. I just told them that someone using government ID wanted to go through the packages."

"What did the police say?" Only two people separated Annja from the newsstand vendor.

"Just to let them know if the guy showed up again. They really don't like people jacking around with official identification and pretending to be police officers."

"Have you seen him today?" Only one person remained in front of Annja.

"No. Why?"

The last customer moved off after buying copies of Time and Newsweek.

"Hang on a second." Annja asked for copies of Cosmopolitan, Wired, National Geographic and People. If she ended up in some government agency's interview room, it would be nice to have reading material while she waited for her attorney to arrive.

"Are you at the newsstand?" Nikolai asked.

Annja paid for the magazines and said thanks. Then she returned to the phone conversation. "Yes."

Across the street, Nikolai peered through the Mailboxes & Stuff window. He had shoulder-length dark hair, beard stubble, a checked shirt under a sleeveless sweater and deep blue eyes.

"Do you see Agent Smith?" Annja slid the magazines into her backpack, two on either side of her notebook computer to provide extra cushioning. The backpack was built around an impact-resistant core case, but it never hurt to be prepared.

Nikolai scanned the crowd waiting for the light. "Maybe. He's wearing different clothes today."

Annja was aware of the four men closing in on her. "Who was the package from?"

"Mario Fellini."

The name surprised Annja and took her back a few years. When she'd finished school, she'd worked at a dig at Hadrian's Wall in England. The Romans had built the eightymile-long wall to cut the country in half, walling out the Picts.

Mario Fellini had been on the dig after completing a double major in fine arts and archaeology. He was Italian, from a large family in Florence, with four older sisters determined to marry him off.

During her time there, Annja had struck up a close friendship with Mario but it hadn't gone any further than that.

Annja didn't know why he would send her something. They hadn't been in touch in years.

"Annja?" Nikolai said.

"Yes?"

"The light is green."

Annja became aware of the pedestrians flowing around her, crossing the street. She stepped off the curb and continued across.

"Do you know this Fellini?" Nikolai asked.

"Yes. At least, I did. We haven't talked in years." Annja's pulse quickened.

"Would he send you anything illegal? Like contraband, maybe?"

"If he's still the same guy I knew, then no, he wouldn't."

"This is good," Nikolai said. "Some of my customers, I'm not so sure. I try to stay away from trouble."

"I know. I'm sorry you're caught up in this."

"You're more caught up in it than I am. That is Agent Smith behind you and to your right."

Great, Annja thought. She took a deep breath. "Is the package there at the store?"

"No. With all the interest in it, I thought perhaps I could arrange a more private delivery. I've got it put away for safekeeping."

Annja smiled. "Thank you." "Is no problem, Annja. For you, anything. If you hadn't gotten so famous doing that show, maybe you wouldn't attract strange people, you know?"

Annja knew Nikolai was referring to Chasing History's Monsters, the syndicated show she cohosted. During the trip to Florida she'd worked the dig site involving Calusa Indians. Although now extinct, the Calusa had been Glades culture American Indians who had lived on shell mounds.

Doug Morrell, Annja's producer on Chasing History's Monsters, had turned up a story of a ghost shark that protected the sunken remnants of Calusa villages. Annja had covered the legend of the ghost shark—which, as it turned out, most of the local people hadn't even heard of—while she'd been on-site.

As a result of the television show, Annja had ended up being known by a lot of strange people around the world. Sometimes they sent her things.

"You remember the shrunken head the Filipino headhunter sent you?" Nikolai asked.

"Yes." There was no way Annja was going to forget that. It wasn't the shrunken head. She'd seen those before. The troublesome part was that it turned out to be evidence in a murder case against a serial murderer who had liked the show. That had involved days spent with interviewers from several law-enforcement agencies.

To make matters worse, in the end the investigators found out that the head shrinker had intended to send the head to Kristie Chatham, the other star of the television show. Kristie was known for her physical attributes rather than her intellect. Annja had to admit Kristie's enormous popularity sometimes bothered her.

"That was a mess," Nikolai sighed. "I thought I would never get the smell out."

"I'm sure it's not another shrunken head," Annja said.

"I hope you're right."

Annja's mind was racing. She was usually a quick thinker even under pressure. "Can you make a fake package about the same size as the one I was sent?"

~ Rogue Angel: God of Thunder hits stores July 10, 2007.

Thursday, June 7, 2007

Linda Pendleton Executioner Comic Interview


Check out Jazma Online's recent interview with Linda Pendleton, focusing on her and late husband Don Pendleton's adaptations of two Executioner books to graphic comic book format in the 90's.

Is it time for the man who inspired The Punisher to make his way to monthly comics again? Which Gold Eagle series stand out to you as comic-worthy? Who would your star creative team be and why? You tell us.

Gearing up for Comic-Con 2007

The preparations are underway for Gold Eagle to hit the 38th Comic-Con International in San Diego from July 26 to July 29, 2007. Comic-Con utilizes the entire San Diego Convention Center including 460,000 square feet of exhibit space and two floors of meeting space. The original event began in 1970 with 300 attendees in the basement of the US Grant Hotel in downtown San Diego. Last year 123,000 pop culture fans in attendance proved Comic-Con is the largest comic book and pop culture event in the North America.

We'll be giving away free books at our booth as we did last year, entertaining some guests and unveiling Gold Eagle's new ongoing series project premiering January 2008. Watch the blog for more details as they are finalized.

Thursday, April 12, 2007

An Excerpt From Rogue Angel: The Lost Scrolls


"I thought Julius Caesar burned down the Great Library," Annja Creed said. She picked her way gingerly across a small lot of churned-up dust with chunks of yellow-brick rubble in it, glad for the durability of her hiking boots. She was sheltered from the already intense morning Mediterranean sun by the floppy straw hat she wore over her yellow T-shirt and khaki cargo pants.

"He did, Ms. Creed," her handsome young Egyptian archaeologist escort said, turning to smile at her. He had a narrow, dark hawk's face and flashing eyes. His white lab smock hung from wide shoulders and flapped around the backs of his long skinny legs in the sea breeze snaking around the close-set buildings. "Among others."

"Call me Annja, please," she said.

He laughed. His teeth were as perfect as his English. His trace of accent made young Dr. Ismail al-Maghrabi seem that much more exotic. I love my job, she thought.

"If you will call me Ismail," he said.

"Done," she replied with a laugh.

Ahead of them stood a ten-foot-high loafshaped translucent plastic bubble. The rumbling of generators forced them to raise their voices as they approached. Some kind of structure had recently been demolished here, hard by the Alexandrian waterfront in the old Greek quarter. Big grimy warehouses and blocks of shops with cracked-stucco fronts crowded together on all sides. Although Alexandria was a major tourist destination the rumble and stink of buses and trucks through the narrow streets suggested little of charm and less of antiquity. Still, Annja's heart thumped in her throat with anticipation.

"For one thing," al-Maghrabi said, "the library was very extensive indeed. Also parts of it appear to have been scattered across the Greek quarter. As you probably know, in 2004 a team of Egyptian and Polish archaeologists uncovered a series of what appear to be lecture halls a few blocks from here."

She nodded. "I read about it on the BBC Web site at the time. A very exciting development."

"Most. The library was a most remarkable facility, as much a great university and research center as anything else. Along with the famous book collections, and of course reading rooms and auditoria, it offered dormitories for its visitors, lush gardens, even gymnasia with swimming pools."

"Really? I had no idea."

He stopped to open the latch to a door in a wooden frame set into the inflated tent. "The envelope is for climate control," he explained, opening the door for her. "Positive air pressure allows us to keep humidity and pollution at bay. Our treasures are probably not exceptionally vulnerable to such influences, considering their condition, but why take chances?"

The interior seemed gloomy after the brilliant daylight. Annja paused to let her eyes adjust as he resecured the door. There was little to see but a hole cut into the ground. "You seem to enjoy some pretty enviable resources here, if you don't mind my saying so, Ismail."

"Not at all! Our discoveries here have attracted worldwide attention, which in turn helps to secure the resources to develop and conserve them properly. For that I believe we have to thank the Internet—and of course your own television network, which provides a share of our funding."

"Yes. I am thrilled they allowed me to come here," Annja said.

"I'm told the scrolls contain revelations about the lost civilization of Atlantis." Annja couldn't mask the skepticism in her voice.

"Come with me. I trust you don't mind a certain amount of sliding into holes in the ground?"

Annja laughed. "I am a real archaeologist, Ismail. I don't just play one on TV."

She didn't actually have to slide. A slanting tunnel about three feet wide and five feet high had been dug down to a subterranean chamber perhaps a dozen feet below ground level. Hunched over, they followed thick yellow electrical cords down the shallow ramp.

"As you no doubt know," her guide said, "the library is believed to have been built early in the third century B.C. by Ptolemy II, around the temple to the Muses built by his father, the first Ptolemy."

"That's the Mouseion, isn't it?" she said.

"Origin of our word museum?"

"Yes. It was also said that Ptolemy III decreed that all travelers arriving in Alexandria had to surrender any books or scrolls in their possession to be copied by official scribes before being returned to them. While we don't know for certain if that is true, the library's collection swiftly grew to be the grandest in the Mediterranean world."

They reached a level floor of stone polished slick by many feet over many years. Banks of yellowish floodlights lit a chamber perhaps ten by twenty feet. Three people were crowded inside, two on hands and knees rooting in what appeared to be some kind of lumpy mound. One was bending over a modern table. The air was cool and smelled of soil and mildew.

The person at the table straightened and turned toward them, beaming. He was a tall, pot-bellied young man with crew-cut blond hair and an almost invisible goatee on the uppermost of his several chins. "Greetings! You must be Annja Creed."

He held out a big hand. Annja knew at once he was a working archaeologist. He looked soft and pale overall, but his hand was callused and cracked like a stonemason's, from digging, lifting and the painstaking work of chipping artifacts from a stony matrix with a dentist's steel pick.

"This is Dr. Szczepan Pilitowski," Ismail said. He struggled with the first name—it came out sounding close enough to Stepan. "He's our expert in extracting the scrolls safely from the ground."

"We all do what we can," Pilitowski said in a cheerful tone. "There is much to be done."

The other two, a man and a woman, turned around and picked themselves up from the floor. They wore kneepads, Annja noticed. One was a man, the other a woman. Both were thin and dark, and she took them for Egyptians.

"This is Ali Mansur and Maria Frodyma," Ismail said. The man just bobbed his head and grinned shyly.

The woman stuck out her hand. She wore her black hair in a bun, and had a bright, birdlike air to her. "Please call me Maria," she said in a Polish accent as Annja shook her hand.

"Annja."

"This was a library storeroom," Ismail said.

"Most of the scrolls were kept in locked cabinets, in chambers such as this. Only the most popular items, or those specifically requested by scholars, were stored in the reading rooms."

"So that heap…?" Annja said, nodding toward the rubble mound where Maria and Ali had been working.

"The remains of a cabinet," Pilitowski said.

"Damaged by the fire, it collapsed and mostly decomposed, leaving the burned scrolls behind."

"How many scrolls did the library possess?" Annja asked. "Or does anyone really know?"

"Not precisely," Maria said, wiping sweat from her forehead with the back of one hand. She seemed to show a quick smile to the bulky and jovial Pilitowski, whose own smile broadened briefly. "Some have hypothesized it held as few as forty thousand scrolls. Others suggest the founding Ptolemy set a goal of half a million. On the basis of what we have found, we feel confident conjecturing the former limit is far too low. As to the upper—" She shrugged expressively.

"This isn't my time period," Annja confessed, believing as she did in professional full disclosure. "But I can certainly see how the recovery of any number of scrolls at all from the ancient world is a terrific thing."

"Oh, yes," Maria replied.

"And here you see three of them," Pilitowski boomed. A vast callused paw swept dramatically toward the table.

They looked like three forearm-sized chunks of wood fished out of a campfire, Annja thought. They lay on a sheet of white plastic.

"These are actual scrolls?"

"Yes, yes," Pilitowski said. "My friends and I extracted them this morning."

Annja felt a thrill. She'd seen older artifacts—she'd seen Egyptian papyri a thousand years older in the British Museum. But there was something about these scrolls, the thrill of something lost for two thousand years and believed to be indecipherable even if found. Yet modern technology was about to restore the contents of these lumps of char to the world.

"Even if they're just grocery lists," she said a little breathlessly, "this is just so exciting."

The others just smiled at her. They knew. "Who really burned the library, anyway?" she asked Ismail. "Was it Julius Caesar?"

The others looked to Ismail. Ali was still grinning but had yet to utter a syllable. Annja's first thought had been that he didn't speak English. But that appeared to be the common language on the multinational dig. She began to suspect he was just shy.

"Caesar was one of the culprits," her guide said.

"One of them?"

"And not the first," Maria said. The archaeologists seemed glad of the break. Annja understood that. They loved their work, she could tell, as she loved the work when she was engaged in it. But it could be brutally arduous, and breaks were welcome.

"The first major fire damage occurred around 88 B.C.," the woman said, "when much of Alexandria burned down during civil disorders. This may have been the greatest destruction. Then during the Roman civil wars in 47 B.C., Julius Caesar chased his rival, Pompey, into the city. When Egyptian forces attacked him, Caesar set fire to the dockyards and the Egyptian fleet. The fire probably spread through trade goods piled on the docks waiting to be loaded on ships. The library lay near the waterfront, like now. Many scrolls were lost in the conflagration. Also it appears Roman soldiers stole many scrolls and sent them to Rome."

~ The Lost Scrolls will be in bookstores May 8, 2007.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Mack Bolan on Youtube

Check out the only footage we've ever seen of the one and only Mack Bolan convention from 1985. Described as "an orgy of macho" by the news reporter in this clip, it features an actor playing Bolan, and some insight from his creator, Don Pendleton.


Also, here's a very ambitious homemade Bolan movie feature- ya gotta give respect to these dudes who took the time to make this.


(Thanks to Liew, who posted these on the GraphicAudio boards. The Bolan Convention footage is also available on Mackbolan.com).

Saturday, March 17, 2007

Of Pink Rayguns and SciFi Chicks


Pink Raygun defines “fangirl” as a passionate fan of various elements of geek culture. Just as obsessed as a fanboy, but with much better fashion sense. So how do you know if you or someone you love is a fangirl? Click here for the "Top Ten Signs You Might Be a Fangirl".

Speaking of grrrl power, SciFiChick.com recently gave Rogue Angel: Forbidden City a great review.

Don't worry, boys- there's room enough for everyone.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Behind the Scenes at the Rogue Angel Megashoot


As promised, a look behind the scenes at a recent megashoot for the Rogue Angel book covers. Photographer Michael Alberstat shot about 2,000 digital images of model Chrisanne Baitis with a range of lights and backdrops to provide the base for Tim Bradstreet's photo-realistic art on future covers.


...from The Toronto Star:
"It's all about getting the right lighting and the right body language to create this character on the cover that draws your eye, and then creating a composition around it that ties everything together and brings a unity to the illustration," Bradstreet said. "It's almost the art of the movie poster, in a way. It's bringing those elements in the film into one image," he added.
The slender, Montana-born Baitis, who struggled with the weight of her weapons during the long photo shoot, said depicting Annja Creed creates a challenge different from "other modelling projects where they just put clothing on you and your job is just to advertise the clothing. "In this kind of modelling, because you're given a character ... you have to be very intuitive with the way you use your body. This requires a lot more depth and ... thinking, and detailed work."
The appeal of Rogue Angel series is reaching both male and female readers. "Women are responding to her because she's strong but she's not perfect, she's not superhuman, she makes mistakes, she's kinda goofy. Men like the action (and) she's a sexy woman," says Gold Eagle editor Nicole Brebner. Blake Morrow, Art Director for the series, said the L.A.-based Baitis was chosen because "she's not only a beautiful model, there's an intensity to her eyes that draws you in. She's like Jennifer Garner meets ... Angelina Jolie."

Rogue Angel: Solomon's Jar arrives at GraphicAudio


The gang at GraphicAudio have just released Rogue Angel: Solomon's Jar (book 2) in audiobook format; click here for a sample.

Tom from Blogcritics.org gave the audio version of book 1, Destiny, five stars, saying "Simply put, this was probably the best-produced audiobook I have ever listened to. Period! That is after listening to well over 2-300 audiobooks. In some ways this is akin to listening to some of the old radio dramas from the golden age of radio. Now if you think of the old radio shows as being like "Buck Rogers in the 25th Century", well this is like "Star Wars" in comparison."

Also available on The GraphicAudio site are audiobook versions of our Deathlands, Executioner, Mack Bolan, Stony Man and Outlanders series.

Friday, March 2, 2007

Gold Eagle Author Q+A Prep


We'll soon be featuring Q+A's with some of our authors, as well as their thoughts on what and how they write (plus other stuff in the works) and would love to snag questions from you for them. E-mail your questions for your favorite Gold Eagle book authors to readgoldeagle@hotmail.com.

Rogue Angel: Forbidden City


Out this month is Rogue Angel: Forbidden City, book 5 in the ongoing series.

A stunning artifact holds the key to an untapped power of global destruction—
While working on a dig in the California wilderness, archaeologist-adventurer Annja Creed uncovers evidence of a tragedy that's linked to Chinese miners during the days of the Gold Rush. A sudden attack on the site by shadow figures drives Annja to find the connection to a mysterious buried city in China. Lured by legends of gold, betrayal and the vengeance of a Han Dynasty overlord, Annja travels on the Orient Express, battling avaricious treasure hunters and a modern-day descendant of an ancient league of assassins. Her adversaries will stop at nothing to stake their claim on the fabled lost city, where a Han leader's dark past promises doom for those who dare to reveal its evil power.

Book 6 in the series, Rogue Angel: The Lost Scrolls, will be available in stores May 8th.

Watch this space for other Gold Eagle book releases!