Hello dear friends, readers, and cool cats! It is my highest honor and with much excitement that I announce and reveal the COVER for my newest poem/short story collection, “Endless Silver Ocean!” ๐ Thank you so much to my publisher for making this beauty.
THIS BOOK IS 17+ DUE TO A FEW OF THE STORIES. THEY HAVE DISCLAIMERS AND RATINGS BEFOREHAND IN THE DESCRIPTION. MOST OF THE POEMS AND OTHER SHORT STORIES ARE ACCEPTABLE FOR 13+.
Endless Silver Ocean
The ebook version should be out on Amazon in a few days. The paperback with my added novella we are working hard to be released in January/February of 2021.
I also read the first 6-7 pages of my holiday short story: “Song in the Stars.” Please feel free to watch/listen to it and learn more about this work!
You can look at the official “Endless Silver Ocean” Page By Clicking Here:
More updates to come in a few days! Stay tuned and thank you for the support! ๐ <3
Scientists are just beginning to understand the impact of trash on aquatic life. Fish and seabirds that mistake grocery bags for prey will glut their stomachs with debris that their digestive system canโt expel. When a young whale drifted ashore and died in the Philippines in 2019, an autopsy revealed that its belly was packed with 88 pounds of plastic bags, nylon rope, and netting. Two weeks later, another whale beached in Sardinia, its stomach crammed with 48 pounds of plastic dishes and tubing. Certain types of coral like to eat plastic more than food. They will gorge themselves like a kid on Twinkies instead of eating what they need to survive. Microbes that flourish on plastic have ballooned in number, replacing other species as their population explodes in a polymer ocean. If it seems trivial to worry about the population statistics of bacteria in the ocean, you may be interested to know that ocean microbes are essential to human and planetary health. About a third of the carbon dioxide generated on land is absorbed by underwater organisms, including one species that was just discovered in the CCZ in 2018. The researchers who found that bacterium have no idea how it removes carbon from the environment, but their findings show that it may account for up to 10 percent of the volume that is sequestered by oceans every year.