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They invaded our world.
Bombs went off in New York, Tokyo, Miami, Chicago, Dallas, London, and Beijing. They also exploded in smaller towns like Peshtigo, Wisconsin, Mystic, Connecticut, and Hester, Illinois.
Carpet Bombing.
That’s what it was called in World War 2. The aliens just took it to the extremes, bombing towns and cities all over the world, all at the same time. One big blitzkrieg of destruction.
Bam.
The superheroes of the world were devastated. So was our military. Bombs went off in Pearl Harbor, on the Navy Pier in Baltimore, and even in North Korea, sinking ships and destroying bases. Nothing was left to chance. The monsters wanted our world.
Why?
Because they wanted resources, land, and power. Instead of enslaving us, they turned our people into more resources. The masses were harvested and turned into killing machines. We are the cannon fodder. We are the grain they harvest to make bread.
They didn’t negotiate. There weren’t any treaties or discussions on terms of surrender. They simply arrived and began killing.
But they made one crucial mistake. Before the invasion, there were maybe twenty superheroes in North America. We had more supervillains than heroes. Rebellion is baked into America, from the founding of the country. We love to rebel.
The bombs made more supers.
And now, we’re taking our country back.
--
Trigger warnings.
There’s a lot of sex and mindless violence in this book. The characters are real people with damaged psyches. None of them grew up in nice, white picketed fence houses. They talk about their horrific parents, churches, and teachers. They aren’t saints. Most of them are sinners who are looking for redemption. Life isn’t orderly. It’s messy and violent.
I forgot to mention harems, gay and lesbian characters, anarchy, violence, and chaos. Yes, there’s that in this series as well. Did I mention sex? Lots of it in graphic detail.
Think gangsters and mafia, or Independence Day, but with superheroes.
Yes, it’s fricking great!
I hope you love it! If not, go read Little House on the Prairie. Maybe that won’t bother your sensitive tummies so badly.
Genre: HaremLit
Bombs went off in New York, Tokyo, Miami, Chicago, Dallas, London, and Beijing. They also exploded in smaller towns like Peshtigo, Wisconsin, Mystic, Connecticut, and Hester, Illinois.
Carpet Bombing.
That’s what it was called in World War 2. The aliens just took it to the extremes, bombing towns and cities all over the world, all at the same time. One big blitzkrieg of destruction.
Bam.
The superheroes of the world were devastated. So was our military. Bombs went off in Pearl Harbor, on the Navy Pier in Baltimore, and even in North Korea, sinking ships and destroying bases. Nothing was left to chance. The monsters wanted our world.
Why?
Because they wanted resources, land, and power. Instead of enslaving us, they turned our people into more resources. The masses were harvested and turned into killing machines. We are the cannon fodder. We are the grain they harvest to make bread.
They didn’t negotiate. There weren’t any treaties or discussions on terms of surrender. They simply arrived and began killing.
But they made one crucial mistake. Before the invasion, there were maybe twenty superheroes in North America. We had more supervillains than heroes. Rebellion is baked into America, from the founding of the country. We love to rebel.
The bombs made more supers.
And now, we’re taking our country back.
--
Trigger warnings.
There’s a lot of sex and mindless violence in this book. The characters are real people with damaged psyches. None of them grew up in nice, white picketed fence houses. They talk about their horrific parents, churches, and teachers. They aren’t saints. Most of them are sinners who are looking for redemption. Life isn’t orderly. It’s messy and violent.
I forgot to mention harems, gay and lesbian characters, anarchy, violence, and chaos. Yes, there’s that in this series as well. Did I mention sex? Lots of it in graphic detail.
Think gangsters and mafia, or Independence Day, but with superheroes.
Yes, it’s fricking great!
I hope you love it! If not, go read Little House on the Prairie. Maybe that won’t bother your sensitive tummies so badly.
Genre: HaremLit
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Used availability for Rex Mahon's Not the Hero