2006 News Archive
Nazi Werewolves Invading Czech Republic
AUGUSTA, Ga. - Harbor House is pleased to announce the selling of foreign rights for Steve Ruthenbeck's horror novel Dogs of War, to be released in the Czech Republic . This is the first novel Harbor House has sold for Czech foreign rights. The deal was inked by New York-based rights agent Al Longden of Rights Unlimited with publishing house D-Consult Publisher in Praha 4 of the Czech Republic.
Driven by intense desire and fueled by desperation, the warriors in Steve Ruthenbeck's Dogs of War will let nothing stand in the way of their quest. In the throes of World War II, eight battle-hardened commandos drop into the deserted French town of Le Coeur . Their mission: recover a mysterious and coveted box from the city's bank.
Within grasp of their objective, trouble emerges in the form of Nazi guards. A familiar enemy soon reveals a terrifying new face - these soldiers have long since given up the virtue of man for the violence of the beast. These Nazis are werewolves.
A stunningly paced thriller, Dogs of War, winner of the BatWing Press Circle Literary Award, combines malignant horror and pulse-racing action in a page-turning tale of the brutality of war, and how the greatest battles are waged within one's heart.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR :
Steve Ruthenbeck wrote his first story at the age of eight, about a mutant goldfish. More recently, he has been published in Nova Science Fiction Magazine and D.E. Davidson's Crimson . Born and raised in rural Minnesota , Steve has been known to farm when not writing novels.
For more information, contact publicity at (706) 738-0354 or publicity@harborhousebooks.com