Stephen Beam

Stephen Beam

About

Stephen Beam is a native Californian. For many years he was a video game artist, starting out freelancing, then later employed full time at Interplay Entertainment. He created game art as diverse as Nintendo's Mario Brothers to realistic Star Trek worlds. He moved on to work as a graphic artist and web designer, creating games and presentations for various government services such as the Long Beach MWD and many VA hospitals around the country. He is now writing eBooks for the Kindle Store and creating experimental digital art.

Looking at visual art and the written word as the same creative experience - using texture, color and composition to create emotion, these Bizarro genre eBooks are unexpected and unique, horror mixed with humor with a touch of science fiction, blended with an original attitude. If, after reading one of these books you remark,"What the hell did I just read?" then own them all, dear reader.

Through the Eyes of Maria: Choices

Through the Eyes of Maria: Choices

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Description

<p>Maria hits the streets of New York in search of the love denied by her alcoholic father and indifferent mother. When Sergio, a dark, worldly stranger, lures her with diamonds, brand-name clothing, and undivided attention, Maria sees a way out of her dysfunctional home. Seduced by Sergio’s charm and the promise of wealth and recognition, Maria ignores her panicked intuition and wanders into his lair.<br /><br />But in a world where ambition and deception go hand in hand, where dreams are shattered and innocence crushed, Maria discovers she’s trapped in a hell much worse than the one she left. And now, there is no escape. The price for betrayal is blood.<br /><br />Destiny intervenes when Maria meets Christian, a handsome law student haunted by a dark family secret. With her life at risk and time running out, will Maria find the strength to save herself and convince Christian to go against all reason and risk everything to help her?</p>

Story Behind The Book

Inspired by my mother. She found a degree of happiness in Alzheimer's disease.

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