The Pure Cold Light on sale this week at Book View Cafe

My 1993 sf novel, The Pure Cold Light, is the special this week at Book View Cafe, where you’ll find the ebook available for just $.99.

“Gregory Frost’s dystopian adventure, [is] set in an unspecified future Philadelphia that has split in two. The rich and their servants live in the Overcity’s towers; the poor, addicted and disenfranchised nest in the Undercity, occupying derelict buildings, SEPTA catacombs and Box City, a sprawling morass of packing containers on Independence Mall. President Odie is a talk-show host and puppet of the world’s largest corporation, named (sans subtlety) ScumberCorp. They make the drug Orbitol, which has unexpected dimensional side effects, and infuse their Happy Burgers with masses-mollifying tranquilizers…. Frost’s predictions are all the more impressive given that his vision developed in the Internet’s nascent days — a decade and a half before Citizens United, seven years before Survivor and (arguably) before that blurry date when presidential candidates became media monkeys.” Mark Cofta, Philadelphia City Paper

The Pure Cold Light, a science fiction novel

In a future Philadelphia, the drug of choice on the streets will take you to another world…literally.

Amy Reichert, grand master of Foodie Fiction, on the Oddcast

“THE SIMPLICITY OF CIDER is the perfect blend of sweet, smart and immensely satisfying.” So says author Colleen Oakley.
Find out why on this week’s Liars Club Oddcast.

Amy Reichert on the Oddcast

Debut-novelist Kate Brandes on the Oddcast

Kate Brandes, whose first novel, “The Promise of Pierson Orchard,” has just debuted, climbs aboard this week’s Oddcast to talk of perseverance, environmental issues, living in the countryside, and more.

Liars Club Oddcast logo