Title: Floor 21
Author: Jason Luthor
Publisher: Scout Press
Pages: 355
Genre: Sci-fi/Dystopian
Author: Jason Luthor
Publisher: Scout Press
Pages: 355
Genre: Sci-fi/Dystopian
The last of humanity
is trapped at the top of an isolated apartment tower with no memory of how they
got there or why. All travel beneath Floor 21 is forbidden, and nobody can ever
recall seeing the ground floor. Beneath Floor 21, a sickness known as the Creep
infests that halls of the Tower. A biological mass that grows stronger in
reaction to people’s fear and anger, the Creep prey’s on people by causing them
to hallucinate until they’re in a state of panicking, before finally growing
strong enough to lash out and consume them. Only a small team known as
Scavengers are allowed to go beneath Floor 21 to pillage the lower levels in
search of food and supplies.
Jackie is a
brilliant young girl that lives far above the infection and who rarely has to
worry about facing any harm. However, her intense curiosity drives her to
investigate the bottom floors and the Creep. To deal with her own anxiety and
insecurities, she documents her experiences on a personal recorder as she
explores the secrets of the Tower. During the course of her investigation,
Jackie will find herself at odds with Tower Authority, which safeguards what
remains of humanity, as she attempts to determine what created the Creep, how
humanity became trapped at the top of the Tower, and whether anyone knows if
escape is even possible.
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Jason Luthor Talks
Covers
The book cover was actually made by me when I was entering
Amazon’s Scout competition. I needed an image that conveyed fear and tension.
So, the font is Demon Skier, and it has a simple drop shadow effect going with
a blur on the red shadow to make the font stand out. The lower half of the
cover is a rust and blood pattern I passed through a filter to darken it. All
it took was an eraser tool to get it to bleed nicely into the above sky. The
sky overhead was a simple cloudy sky image that underwent a red tinting.
Probably the most prominent element of the book is the skyscraper.
The book is about the last of humanity living on the upper
floors of a tower, so the tower itself had to be visually interesting. This is
actually an image of the Shanghai Jin
Mao Tower
in China. I
picked it because it wasn’t a simple skyscraper. The architecture is
interesting and it makes the silhouette stand out against the sky. The image
was run through a simple greyscale filter. The upper part of the tower was
already dark from the original image, so adjusting the darkness got it to black
out nicely and gave it an ominous feeling. There’s a window set that’s got a
red hue about a third of the way up. That was to offset the greyscale of the
tower with an interesting visual cue, and the use of red again alludes to the
terror of those living inside.
Work on the cover wasn’t terribly difficult, but finding the
right images and color balance was. A few hours at most was spent pondering how
I wanted to construct it. In the end, I believe it conveyed a feeling of fear
and tension that mirrors what the survivors of humanity are experiencing inside
the tower as well.
Jason Luthor has
spent a long life writing for sports outlets, media companies and universities.
His earliest writing years came during his coverage of the San Antonio Spurs as
an affiliate with the Spurs Report and its media partner, WOAI Radio. He would
later enjoy a moderate relationship with Blizzard Entertainment, writing lore
and stories for potential use in future games. At the academic level he has
spent several years pursuing a PhD in American History at the University of Houston, with a special emphasis on Native American
history.
His inspirations include some of the obvious; The Lord of the Rings and Chronciles of Narnia are some of the most cited fantasy series in history. However, his favorite reads include the Earthsea Cycle, the Chronicles of Prydain, as well as science fiction hits such as Starship Troopers and Do Androids dream of Electric Sheep?
His inspirations include some of the obvious; The Lord of the Rings and Chronciles of Narnia are some of the most cited fantasy series in history. However, his favorite reads include the Earthsea Cycle, the Chronicles of Prydain, as well as science fiction hits such as Starship Troopers and Do Androids dream of Electric Sheep?
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