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Deep Breath Hold Tight: Stories About the End of Everything Kindle Edition
– Hugh Howey, New York Times bestselling author of Wool
A new father on a forever-long journey in the wrong direction. The last stowaway at the end of the world. A woman who witnesses mankind's last day. A man whose breath is ice-cold, though it's the depths of summer. An agent hunting for a woman at the edge of the solar system. A reluctant widower who leaves his home to become an astronaut. A boy who turns into a wolf as civilization crumbles around him.
Deep Breath Hold Tight is a collection of powerful short stories about humans facing the end of everything.
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateMay 13, 2014
- File size2035 KB
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About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : B00JOQSBRA
- Publisher : (May 13, 2014)
- Publication date : May 13, 2014
- Language : English
- File size : 2035 KB
- Simultaneous device usage : Unlimited
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 303 pages
- Page numbers source ISBN : 1499165919
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,797,694 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #3,181 in Colonization Science Fiction eBooks
- #3,735 in Science Fiction Anthologies (Kindle Store)
- #6,389 in Science Fiction Anthologies (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Jason Gurley is the author of Awake in the World (Roaring Brook, 2019) and Eleanor (Crown, 2016), and co-author of The Edge of Sleep (St. Martin's, 2023). His short fiction appears in the anthologies Loosed Upon the World (Saga, 2015) and Help Fund My Robot Army!!! (2014). He lives and writes in Scappoose, Oregon. More at www.jasongurley.com.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the stories good, well-written, and readable. They also say the concepts make the book thoroughly readable and the writing style is good.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the stories in the book thought-provoking, with a good premise. They also say the imagery is brutal but entices them to continue reading. Readers describe the book as extraordinary, fantastic, and enjoyable in a horrifying way. They say the stories are dark but well-written and a delightful surprise.
"...author attending an open mic night to read his story is a quiet, thoughtful tale that deserves a second read through.Nebulae..." Read more
"...The stories in the collection are horrendous and beautiful. They all revolve around the end of the world we know, yet are hopeful...." Read more
"Not his best. Check out Eleanor. Amazing read." Read more
"...This collection was truly a delightful surprise, and I'm looking forward to reading more by the author." Read more
Customers find the writing style very depressing but well-written.
"...Jason Gurley is a great writer. It doesn't seem fair that he's such an amazing cover designer as well." Read more
"...So they (some of them) were depressing and sad, but they were well-written and emotionally engaging...." Read more
"...Gurley's prose is tight and well-composed, in every sense of the word...." Read more
"...I ended up on the ride. These are dark stories but so well written, I found THAT characteristic overwhelmed the nature of the stories...." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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Deep Breath Hold Tight contains seven stories, all loosely connected by the end of the world theme. These stories were all previously published either as standalone ebooks, in anthologies or as part of a full length novel.
Wolf Skin
Wolf Skin is the story of someone who becomes a member of one of those murderous roving gangs so popular in post-apocalyptic fiction. It's the darkest of the stories in the collection. The opening few pages in particular are quite graphic, more so than the rest of the stories in the book. My preferences lean towards horror anyway so I was pretty comfortable with the content but it might not be everyone's cup of tea. But the story quickly moves beyond the violence into more thought provoking territory and I enjoyed it.
The Caretaker
One of my favourite pieces in the collection, this is the story of Alice, a woman living alone aboard a space station who discovers she may be the last human alive. Another powerful story with an ending that I loved.
The Winter Lands
Originally published in From the Indie Side, this story of an elderly veteran and aspiring author attending an open mic night to read his story is a quiet, thoughtful tale that deserves a second read through.
Nebulae
Another out and out science fiction story and a standalone chapter from The Colonists. It's the story of Ansel, a man on a deep space mission to investigate a missing persons case. This was my least favourite story in the collection but given the quality of the other stories, that's not much of a criticism. I didn't quite connect with it as well as the other stories and the ending fell flat for me.
Onyx
Another standalone chapter, this time from The Settlers. Micah, for reasons that become clear as the story progresses, reluctantly moves to a huge space station to begin a new life. This is another quiet, moving story that has stuck with me since I read it.
The Last Rail-Rider
I don't want to say too much about this one (no spoilers here) but this story of post-apocalyptic rail rider, Henry, is probably the most off beat of the seven. Somewhat surreal in places, it's another one that deserves a second reading.
The Dark Age
This was the first Jason Gurley story I read and it had lost none of it's impact when I re-read it as part of this collection. This examination of the impact of a deep space mission is moving and thought provoking. Fantastic stuff.
As the title suggests, the stories in Deep Breath Hold Tight : Stories About the End of the World are not happy-go-lucky, all is bright and cheerful tales. There's some darkness, some sorrow. But there's optimism too. If you look for it hard enough.
All in all, a fantastic collection that I'll definitely be reading again. Jason Gurley is a great writer. It doesn't seem fair that he's such an amazing cover designer as well.
I'm not sure, but my vague recollection is that this book was self-published. As such it was much better written and edited than a lot of other self-published books I've read. I don't recall being hit over the head with spelling and grammar errors, which is more than I can say about some other self-published books (and, alas, a few professionally edited books).
About my only gripe was that I found the title page of each story kind of ugly. I'd rather they'd just been omitted, or changed to a regular font face. (I did not lower the number of stars due to the title pages, though. :) Better story title pages would not have gotten 5 stars out of me.)
The stories in the collection are horrendous and beautiful. They all revolve around the end of the world we know, yet are hopeful. Sending a group of explorers into the unknown as a sort of human vanguard. They must go into hibernation and therefore leave everyone on Earth behind. They leave, knowing that family members, parents, spouses, even their children, will be long in their graves by the time they wake up. Heartbreaking and hopeful.
There is always the notion of a higher purpose and a refusal to let go. The main characters in these stories are thinkers, dwellers, people seeking answers. They find it impossible to leave the past behind but refuse to let it stand in the way of the world as it is, or will be. A woman, alone in the brutal new apocalyptic world meets a man who ends up protecting their most treasured belonging, a notebook filled with memories of life as it was.
Jason Gurley has a gift for dialogue. There are no large flowery musings here, just people honestly saying what they think. I have yet to read anything by him that wasn't thought provoking, and even stories with dark subject matter were, in their way hopeful and poignant. At this point he has become one of a small handful of writers that I would buy work from without hesitation. He is that good.
This collection was truly a delightful surprise, and I'm looking forward to reading more by the author.
Top reviews from other countries
At times I did find the lack of speech punctuation confusing and borderline annoying but persistence was always rewarded and I only seemed to notice this on a few of the stories.
If you like your sci-fi broody and raw or you’re a fan of the British series Black Mirror this collection is a must.
