Twin Trinity Media (TTM)


Publisher info

Twin Trinity Media is the publishing and media arm of the Accentuate Writers short story anthology contests, Unsent Letters, Passionate Pens, Recipes & Recovery and other great multi-author book collections. Bite-sized portions of tasty fiction to whet your reading appetite.

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Weird, Weird Jeffrey Mason    by Derek Odom
Price: $0.99 USD. 2590 words. Published by Twin Trinity Media (TTM)  on July 26, 2012. .

Jeffrey Mason is weird. He can't think right, can't speak right, and does odd things. There is a woman who loves him anyway, but she has one simple request for him. Will Jeffrey be able to accommodate that request? Read and find out what it is and whether he can achieve it.
Quarrelsome Fools    by Melinda Todd
Price: $0.99 USD. 2820 words. Published by Twin Trinity Media (TTM)  on May 17, 2012. .

Sometimes in life, the little things get in the way of the things that should really matter. This is the story of what can happen when the little things become too important in a person's life.
Toby & Harry    by Joan H. Young
Price: $0.99 USD. 2650 words. Published by Twin Trinity Media (TTM)  on January 1, 2012. .

0.75 star(4.67)
There are things that go bump in the night, and then there are kids who wake up with bumps from the night. Toby, a devious and disturbed little boy, only seems to love his teddy bear, Harry, even though Harry's worse for wear because of it. It's too bad Harry can't love him back.
In Plain Sight    by Lilah Harding
Price: $0.99 USD. 1900 words. Published by Twin Trinity Media (TTM)  on December 31, 2011. .

Tori and Stuart indulge in an interesting fetish: they "meet" in public places. Each time has its own exciting aspects. In Plain Sight introduces us to Tori and Stuart as they pursue their passion in a refrigerated locker of a convenience store. What surprises might be in store for the exhibitionists? Read Lilah Harding’s erotic short story and find out!
Silence    by Lilah Harding
Price: $0.99 USD. 2810 words. Published by Twin Trinity Media (TTM)  on June 28, 2011. .

Late on winter nights, they meet in secret to explore their passions. Quietly, nearly wordlessly, they relieve the tensions that build between them. It is a ritual of young love, but is it enough? Contemplate the answer when you read Silence, an erotic short story by Lilah Harding.
Bubba to the Rescue    by Jennifer Walker
Price: $4.99 USD. 64010 words. Published by Twin Trinity Media (TTM)  on June 22, 2011. .

What starts out as a leisurely trail ride turns into a terrifying afternoon when Alex and Leslie see a plume of smoke rising in the trees. After saving the neighbor's horses from a horrible fate, the two teens must run through the burning woods and get back to Green Meadow before it's too late.
Winter Comes to Wintan    by Anthony Prescott
Price: $0.99 USD. 3280 words. Published by Twin Trinity Media (TTM)  on April 17, 2011. .

(5.00)
"Winter Comes to Wintan" is a short fantasy story told in the style of the old fables, with leanings toward Greek and Roman mythology. Prescott tells the story of how the harsh cold comes to the world and to one man's heart, with a hint at a moral.
Bubba Goes National    by Jennifer Walker
Price: $4.99 USD. 60210 words. Published by Twin Trinity Media (TTM)  on February 19, 2011. .

(5.00)
Thirteen-year-old Leslie Clark has loved horses for as long as she can remember. Although her widowed father cannot afford to give her everything she desires, she works hard to get what she wants. When what she wants, a great horse to show, is taken right out from under her by her rival, Kate Wellesley, Leslie thinks her whole world has been turned upside down...


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Smashwords book reviews by Twin Trinity Media (TTM)

  • Moroaica on Feb. 07, 2012
    (no rating)
    If this book had been professionally edited, it would easily, and I mean, very easily, be a five-star rating for a book. This book takes the old vampire lore and adds a new twist to it. I'm not a big vampire book fan, but I liked this book's take on it, a lot. When someone sends me a book that's a vampire book, I always ask, "With the proliferation of vampire books on the market, does yours have something special that makes it worth reading?" The answer to that question for this book is: Absolutely, yes! The vampire legend is traced back thousands of years, but in a back story kind of way. We have The Breed, True Bloods and humans. The bloodlines get obscured down the line, so there are some who are turned and some who were born. It's really quite fascinating to me how the author shared this information through the characters. The story has some underlying racism currents, with vampires being exterminated by The Breed, but humans not really all that comfortable with The Breed, either. The back story to this is displayed perfectly in the background, so that we readers get the perfect amount of information to go with the story. Genetic cleansing, genocide, is touched on as well. Some pretty strong topics, but handled in such a way so they don't feel weighty and burdensome, like pushing an agenda, but rather, realistic, like these are things that could easily happen given the situation. Characterization in this novel is strong. The main character is so relate-able, I enjoy the first-person present-tense point of view. It's like having an inside track to what's going on in her mind. We get to see how she processes things, and I enjoyed that. She's not always right, but unlike in omniscient POV, when the author would have to mislead us directly, with this POV, the character can simply misunderstand something that later becomes clear to her, and then to us, without it feeling like the author cheated us. Add to it that she can communicate telepathically as well, it sort of works to have her sharing her thoughts to the reader directly. Max is a quirky character, a half-breed who is part vampire and part human, but due to a mutation or genetic mistake of sorts, she's neither human nor vampire either. In one respect, she seems to have gotten the best of both sides, but she is considered a slayer, and works for The Breed, whose goal and mission is to kill vampires. Considering her own father is a vampire, that makes Max's life a bit complicated as she seeks to protect and hide her father, who is presumed by many to be dead, while he works on what Max believes to be a 'cure' for vampirism and the genetic problems that make her what she is as well--though there are others who believe he is/was working on something entirely different. Little does Max know that her mother and father neither are who she has always believed them to be. In fact, she's soon to find out that nobody in her life is exactly who she believed them to be. Her confusion and lack of information makes the first person point of view work well for readers too, as the author reveals these things to us at the same time she reveals them to Max. I was able to get a good connection with Max, Dillon and several of the vampires. The only person I had a hard time really connecting with was Max's mother, but she wasn't a big primary focus in the story. By about midway through the book, though, I couldn't put it down. I enjoyed being in their world and couldn't wait to see what was going to happen next. The story is so fast paced that readers will never find a moment of boredom, making it hard to find places to take a break, so I kept flipping through the pages, one after another. It's not so fast paced that readers get tired, but keeps a perfect, easy, steady pace throughout, without any unnecessary storyline or description. One of the things new and indie authors often do that is a mistake is to give too much information and description to the reader, not trusting the reader to get their story or characters. Seymour doesn't do this. She gives the reader the exactly perfect amount of information, the perfect pace to keep the reader turning pages, and an exciting enough story to hold the reader's interest. I recommend this book.