Megan Dultry fights her way back from the dead. Hell-bent on seeking vengeance, she sets out to find her murderers. Sending a message to a world gone Godless of their impending fate. There are seven well known deadly sins, and through this gruesome, supernatural tale of revenge, Megan Dultry, reminds them of the eighth.
Diane M. Chattaway is an aspiring, independent writer, based out of North Carolina, where she lives with her husband and their three children. She leads an eclectic lifestyle, which has paved the way towards and through various paths of life.
Diane has spent the past two years bent over books, desperately honing her memorization skills while being primed and polished as a "Scripture Educator In Training." She forges into this year with high hopes, during her continued education in both Prophecy and Catastrophism.
When Diane isn't plotting disaster with the corral of people held captive in her mind, you can find her lounging on the sofa in her favorite sleep-pants, devouring a can of Pringles while binge-watching "The Young And Hungry." Or, standing by a nearby window, suspiciously spying on neighbors, like she is living her own-real-life episode, straight from the movie "The Burbs."
Her hobbies include - Scaring small children, dabbling in photography, candle making, cooking, a love that she turned into occasionally catering small parties, she also enjoys creating short films with her girls, dancing around mindlessly while singing at the top of her lungs, and using apples to bribe small horses, as well as shy goats, to come a little closer, where she spends most of her time working as a Farmhand.
While life is disruptive, and forever changing, her dream stands constant. To write a story, that someone, out there, will enjoy.
Graphic and often uncomfortable, 8 is not for the faint of heart. A very dark portrayal of divine judgment, Chattaway depicts what might be if vengeance wasn’t the Lord’s.
I am a fan of revenge stories. Something about getting payback for wrongdoing is cathartic. I liked 8 a lot. The intersection between reality and a supernatural undertone was done seamlessly. It also made me want to read Dante's Inferno again. I look forward to reading more from Diane M. Chattaway