Cap'n Aux Free Fly Spy Adventures on Kindle Vella!
What do Charles Dickens, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Ernest Hemingway, Hunter S. Thompson, and Cap’n Aux have in common? They all published serialized stories!
Teener-Skater-Punker-Spy!
Folks, many of you have been clamoring for more of Justin Reed’s adventures, the heroic teen orphan-turned-spy of my “Code Name: Dodger” teen Fly Spy thrillers! Well, I’m crazy-excited to announce his further adventures—in serialized fiction format—on Kindle Vella! And, for those of you who have not read the series, this is a great way to get a free taste!
Declassified for the first time, thanks to the Freedom of Information Act—and Kindle Vella, the new mobile serial platform by Amazon!
Told in his own words, Justin fills us in on the missing gaps from his 4-Mission Code Name: Dodger Fly/Spy thriller series. More action, more adventures, more clandestine exploits of the young man that not even the CIA could control!
What's Kindle Vella?
From Amazon Kindle:
“Kindle Vella is a new mobile-first reading platform from Amazon that is based around a serialized, episodic format. It allows readers to read serialized stories one chapter at a time, and readers can redeem tokens to access the episodes.
Readers will be able to read the first three episodes of a story without redeeming tokens.”
(Note: Kindle says that Vella will only be available initially via iPhone, and the US Amazon website.)
3 FOR FREE!!
That’s right!
The first 3 episodes of
Code Name: Dodger—Declassified
are FREE!
CLICK BELOW FOR YOUR FREE EPISODES!
What's Code Name: Dodger?
How about we show instead of tell? Here’s our trailer for Mission 1, starring Yours Truly!
My name’s Justin Reed, a fifteen-year-old New York street kid.
My mom died in a drowning accident when I was six. Then, when I was 11, my dad was murdered by the evil spy Pharaoh. CIA Case Officer Bob Cheney discovered the Pharaoh was after me, too, so he took me into protective custody. The Artful Dodger was my code name, and Bob, code name Fagin, trained me in all sorts of cool spy stuff: advanced self-defense, weapons, surveillance, evasion and survival. “The Company” even taught me how to use some sneaky spy gadgets.
But I had other plans.
Escaping CIA custody, I used my old street smarts—and new CIA training—to track down the Pharaoh myself. But, I quickly learned, I was no match for a seasoned killer.
CIA rescued me. After that, I got adopted. For the first time ever, I finally got to settle down into that quiet, suburban family life, the kind I guess most normal kids get to live.