
For Laurel Gerard, 'A Dime a Dozen' is more than an app for meeting men—it’s her golden ticket for recruiting suckers into her pyramid scheme. But when she matches with recently released Angelo Spillers, her life begins to unravel. A sociopath with a penchant for destruction, Angelo and his twin sister Angel are also using the app to lure victims with empty promises before draining them dry. As Laurel and Angelo’s connection deepens, he realizes that while Angel has always been his shadow, she may also be his biggest threat. Fast-paced, suspenseful, and razor-sharp, Anything for Angel will leave readers questioning every match in a world where nothing is as it seems.
Authors

Kenya Moss-Dyme began writing short-form horror in her teens and won several scholastic writing awards for her creative work. Prey for Me - the hard-hitting story of a monstrous child-abusing preacher - was her first published work in early 2014, followed by the Amazon best-selling dark romance, A Good Wife. She has since firmly established her place in the horror genre with the Halloween 2014 release of Daymares, as well as appearances in anthologies and publications. "The only genres in which I don't feel comfortable writing are comedy and romance. Whenever I try to write a romantic story, it ends up turning dark and the couple will go from taking marriage vows to going on a crime spree! So I tend to stay away from those genres altogether." What are her fans most excited about? The upcoming release of Dead-Zoned, a novel about a Detroit-based zombie apocalypse with a conspiratorial slant; and, Sick: xoxo, a collection of love-themed horror sure to be another favorite! "I love zombies and the supernatural! But there's nothing scarier to me than HUMANS and the unimaginable depths of depravity of which we are capable. You see it in the news every day and you ask yourself, 'what kind of monster...?' That's what I love to explore in my writing, characters that are like the people you think you know - but you really don't know after all. I create them - and then I like to set them free - does that sound a little strange?"

