The Holidays are just around the corner and if you are looking for a gift for that park lover who enjoys political thrillers, we have just the novels for you.
Unleashing Colter's Hell is the best selling debut thriller from award winning author Sean Smith. Set in Yellowstone National Park, the story is a fast-paced adventure with Park Ranger Grayson Cole at its center. The sweeping story spans the globe from North Korea to the Wyoming wilderness. It's hair raising action and twists and turns will leave you on the edge of your seat guessing up until the end.
Lost Cause is the critically acclaimed follow up to Unleashing Colter's Hell. Reader's Favorites gives it five stars and calls it exciting. The novel starts in 1862 at the height of the Civil War. It moves to modern times in a chase for a war relic believed to hold the power to start the second Civil War. Once again, Ranger Cole is at the center of the action, trying to stop a terrorist group hell bent on tearing the nation apart.
Both Unleashing Colter's Hell and Lost Cause are available from Amazon. Kindle downloads are still only $0.99, while holiday prices for paperback versions of the thrillers range from $9 to $13. Check Amazon for actual prices.
To get your copies of these best selling novels, please click here.
Happy Holidays!
Buy Unleashing Colter's Hell, Lost Cause, and Need To Know three of Amazon's top selling national park thrillers today!
Monday, November 24, 2014
Saturday, November 15, 2014
Must National Parks modernize to remain relevant?
Michael Gray |
National
parks are all over the news these days. From stories about a “Creepy” graffiti bandit to efforts by some states to seize our national heritage, national parks are at the top of
the national discussion. At the heart of many of these stories is a question,
one that has perplexed the Park Service from before its inception, how can the
park system remain relevant in our modern world? Some even go so far as to
question the conservation ethic which serves as the Park Service’s guiding
management principle, claiming it should be buried.
Everyone
seems to have an idea on how to make the parks relevant. Suggestions range from
giving the parks to the states, providing new or expanded access for
recreational activities like mountain biking or providing new amenities like
high speed internet and cell phone services.
Putting
aside the fact that national parks like Glacier and Rocky Mountain continue to break visitation
records, pundits bemoan the fact that the current park system is a throwback to
an ancient time. If national parks are
to remain relevant especially to millennials and minorities the park system
must get with the times.
But is this
the case? Are we standing on a historic precipice? Must we so dramatically
change the park system to save it, that it would be hardly recognizable to
visitors even a decade ago?
Anyone who
would answer yes to these questions obviously doesn’t know the Park Service’s
history and how it is that we are the beneficiary of a system that is the envy
of the world.
Nearly every
generation of park defenders is challenged by a misguided segment of the
population saying the parks must modernize or risk becoming irrelevant. The
parks are too difficult to access, the park service places to many restrictions
on visitors, they are too antiquated or out of date they charge. They need to be run more like a business, offering
a resort like broad spectrum of activities and amenities.
However, the
park system was created in part as a counter to modernization or as some put it
the cheapening of nature.
In the early
years of the country, the nation’s best known natural wonder was Niagara Falls.
People came from all over the world to see the mighty cataract. Quick thinking
entrepreneurs saw dollars signs in those visitors. They bought up many of best
viewing spots and walled them off, with a baseball like outfield fence. Visitors were charged a pretty penny to see the
falls through precut viewing holes. Yet, this would only capture so much money
and wouldn’t guarantee repeat visits, so these entrepreneurs continually sought
ways to capture the public’s attention, to keep the falls “modern.” Promoters
brought in high wire acts and traveling circuses to squeeze the crowds of their
hard earned money. Unfortunately, Niagara
Falls became little more than a cheap backdrop for the ever sensational and
questionable sideshows.
It was
against this backdrop that the national park system got its start. Early
proponents of the parks realized that private viewing platforms, circus acts,
and high wire stunts cheapened Niagara Falls, but even worse the
“modernization” cheapened visitor’s experience, rendering a trip to the falls as
no different than an experience that could be had at a circus or carnival. The founders of the national parks knew what made
Yellowstone and Yosemite special, they can provide experiences and create
memories to be found nowhere else in the world. The park system’s founders deliberately
wanted to prevent the cheapening of the country’s scenic wonders; by protecting
our most iconic landscapes while providing reasonable access for all. Unlike
Europe where public lands were often playgrounds for the rich and powerful,
America’s public domain would be open to everyone. As such, the park system and
park service were established to preserve and protect our nation’s best
natural, cultural and historic wonders for the benefit of both current and
future generations.
Parks don’t
need Wi-Fi, parks don’t need high speed internet, parks don’t need five-star accommodations
and parks don’t need state management. These so-called solutions are actually
the quickest path toward rendering the parks irrelevant, merely another side
show. Instead the public must demand that park managers focus on what makes
national parks’ unique and protect that.
The only reason
we have the opportunity to debate the relevance of national parks today is
because our ancestors put aside their short term wants by protecting our most
treasured places. We owe them a great
debt for this gift. We cannot pay them back for this gift. Rather we can merely
pass it forward unimpaired. If we curb our desire to modernize the national
parks, future generations will thank us as well.
Sean Smith
is a former Yellowstone Ranger, and an award winning conservationist, TEDx
speaker, and author. He writes national park thrillers from his home in the
shadow of Mount Rainier National Park. To learn more about his conservation
work and novels, please visit www.seandavidsmith.blogspot.com or follow him on twitter:
@parkthrillers
Labels:
internet,
national parks,
park service,
relevant,
yellowstone,
yosemite
Saturday, November 8, 2014
Five Stars! Lost Cause: A Grayson Cole Thriller, is exciting and fast-paced.
Jack Magnus for Readers' Favorite has reviewed Lost Cause and gives it Five Stars, calling it an "exciting and fast-paced" thriller. Read the entire review here. Lost Cause is the follow up to Unleashing Colter's Hell, an Amazon Top 100 Terrorism Thriller. Get your copy of Lost Cause and Unleashing Colter's Hell here: bit.ly/parkthriller
Thursday, November 6, 2014
Former Park Ranger Releases Lost Cause, his second National Park Thriller
Press Release
November 7, 2014
Contact: Sean Smith
206-818-4041
seanwrites@yahoo.com
Former Park Ranger Releases Thriller Lost Cause
Thriller set in civil war battlefields about a possible second Civil War
November 7, 2014: On the eve of the 150th anniversary of the reelection of Abraham Lincoln, Former Park Ranger Sean Smith has published his second thriller. Lost Cause is the follow up to Unleashing Colter’s Hell, an Amazon Top 100 Terrorism Thriller.
Lost Cause is a “page-turning” race to recover a relic supposedly owned by famed Confederate General Robert E. Lee. Legend has it; whoever possesses the relic has the power to start America’s second Civil War. The Confederate League unleashes a campaign of terror and murder to recover the prize. Park Ranger Grayson Cole races across America from Civil War battlefield to the Halls of Washington D.C. in a desperate attempt to stop the coming war.
Sean uses his ranger experience, civil war research, and his unbridled imagination to weave a compelling, plausible, and intelligent story. Lost Cause’s attention to historical detail, its nail biting action, and unpredictable plot twists will leave the reader guessing until the story’s climax.
The book is published by Create Space and available on Amazon. Print copies can be ordered for around $12.00, Kindle downloads for $0.99.
Pick up your copy at bitl.ly/parkthrillers
Sunday, November 2, 2014
Lost Cause: Nominated for Reader's Favorite Award!
#BREAKING: Lost Cause nominated for the 2015 #ReadersFavorite Book Awards! More on the nomination to come soon. In the meantime, get your copy here.bit.ly/parkthrillers
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)