"God gave man the flaw of idiocy and because of that flaw, I was created."
In the year 2024, World War Three rages on with the United States losing terribly. Determined to remain the dominant country, the government demands animal experimentation labs to create killing machines to increase their chances of victory.
After capturing a young wolf named Aonair, the humans immediately began turning him into an indestructible, vengeance-driven monster. Ignorant of the internal changes Aonair was going through, they never uncovered his plans of a violent escape.
Now free from the confines of the lab, Aonair finds he is still in danger. As his past crumbles, an unwanted yet necessary war breaks out between man and experiment and a larger, more powerful enemy is created. Friends will be made and revenge will fuel their fires, but will it be enough to win, to live, and to finally be free?
Born and raised in New Jersey, Angie Anomalous spent most of her time despising reading and writing. With her head in the clouds, school wasn’t easy and as her parents neared divorce, she looked for escape. Only then, did she one day pick up her first book and immediately fell in love with reading. Using books as a way to escape the reality she lived, she held onto another passion — another way of escape and venting; writing.
In freshman year of high school, her writing grew more serious; going from poetry to short stories, and eventually her first short novel not released to the public. During the end of her senior year in high school, her writing flew through, setting new ideas and in 2011, she began writing her first novel, Experiment 6752. In 2012, Experiment 6752 was completed and self-published on sites like Amazon and Lulu. After her former high school English teacher asked how she would top her fantasy-fiction novel, she replied, “don’t worry, I will,” and began writing her second novel.
Thriving to provide the same comfort books had given her in her childhood, Angie works hard to capture readers in new worlds with original characters yet to be discovered.