by Ken Benton
• An obsessed Secret Service agent
• A long motorcycle chase scene
Buck Out is available in Kindle, paperback, and audio here:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B010AT768E
Rational Collapse: When mass rioting erupts across America in response to a chain of police shootings, two Homeland Security agents race to collect the evidence that will prove the incidents were coordinated by foreign terrorists.
In this politically-incorrect thriller you will encounter:
• The ultimate bug-out vehicle
• Terrorists striking in an imaginative way (or is it?)
• Police officers persecuted for doing their job
• A sharpshooting teenage girl
• Intense gunfights at a campground and truck stop
• Fun with the typical American’s mental instability
• A Duck fight
Rational Collapse is available in Kindle and paperback here:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B072M9S9VC
SurviRal: A Denver couple tries to escape the chaos of the city after a killer manmade virus crashes western society.
In this uncomfortable eye-opener you will encounter:
• Dutch scientists discovering they are not God
• Bugging out via mountain bike and golf cart
• A survivalist Congressman adept at archery
• A bad guy gang undermined by their own fame
• A 50 BMG
• Colorado topography and culture
SurviRal is available in Kindle and paperback here:
.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00R4VD7PS
Prepping for the day the SHTF: A complete bug-out and survival plan for life after doomsday.
This is my non-fiction prepping book for all you Joels out there. Learn how to become much better prepared than even Joel was! Available in Kindle and paperback here:
.
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00CHQPSVG
A Word from the Author
I’m probably a lot like you. I look around at the world we’re living in and shake my head. The situation is unsustainable. But hey—we had a good run, right? Strong societies typically last about 200 years, and that’s right where we are. Maybe we’ll keep it together a while longer.
Even if the nukes don’t fly and the viruses don’t mutate, I cannot see our great grandchildren sitting complacently while we dump an unfathomable mountain of debt on their shoulders. At some point, the new generation will say nuts to that and refuse to accept being born into bondage to pay the bills for all the fun their recent ancestors had. This is exactly how revolutions start.
Going off the grid and getting out of the system is not just for crazy people any more. It’s also for very sane people. When you see an unsustainable situation and remain a willing part of it, hoping it holds together a while longer, what is it you are really hoping for? Don’t psychologists call this living in denial? The type of economic collapse that looms on the horizon will make your bank accounts worthless. Hoarding gold is a viable option, but how much of it can you practically store in your city home and hope to use for money one day? Where will the food and clothing come from that you hope to trade it for?
Rural land and homesteading knowledge may be the only valuable things in the near future. This is what prepping is all about. Nobody says you have to wait until the SHTF to bug out. You can start building everything now and get out of Dodge well in advance. That way, you can get set up with chickens and goats as well. When you have goats, you have milk—and when you have milk, you have all the dairy products you will ever need.
Having the ability to prepare now, you have no excuse when the day comes upon you like a thief in the night. The modern-day city life becomes less fulfilling once you see how you can be living an off-grid, self-sustained life on your own mini-farm. Instead of saving money in a soon-to-be worthless bank account, you can stock up on the things that really count. You can be making new friends with like-minded neighbors. You can be building a real future.
If you are like me, this knowledge will eat away at you until you actually start to do something about it. Listen to your nagging inner self. Shift your focus. Become passionate about establishing the only form of security left to us.
I lift my glass of homemade wine and wish you the best of fortune. Maybe I’ll see you out in the country someday. Cheers.
Ken Benton
Table of Contents
Ninety-three Million Miles from Earth
National Solar Observatory Headquarters, Boulder, CO
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty One
Chapter Twenty Two
Chapter Twenty Three
Chapter Twenty Four
A Word from the Author