When tragedy strikes a renowned throuple of big cat wranglers, and their third wheel is slain by a tiger performer, the distraught female lead commits suicide by feline, and her reeling husband follows shortly in her footsteps, but not before releasing their entire blood-thirsty menagerie of exotic beasts upon a small Nevada town just outside Vegas, to stalk unsuspecting residents in search of easy prey. About the Author: A graduate of the University of Southern California's Cinema-Television Production program, Jerome Berglund spent a picaresque decade in the entertainment industry before returning to the Midwest where he was born and raised. His recent and forthcoming writing publications include short stories in Paragon Press, Stardust, and the Watershed Review, a play in Iris Literary Journal, and poetry in the Dewdrop, Wild Roof, and a Flying Ketchup Press anthology collection. He is also an established, award-winning fine art photographer, whose black and white pictures have been exhibited in galleries across New York, Minneapolis, and Santa Monica.
When tragedy strikes a renowned throuple of big cat wranglers, and their third wheel is slain by a tiger performer, the distraught female lead commits suicide by feline, and her reeling husband follows shortly in her footsteps, but not before releasing their entire blood-thirsty menagerie of exotic beasts upon a small Nevada town just outside Vegas, to stalk unsuspecting residents in search of easy prey. About the Author: A graduate of the University of Southern California's Cinema-Television Production program, Jerome Berglund spent a picaresque decade in the entertainment industry before returning to the Midwest where he was born and raised. His recent and forthcoming writing publications include short stories in Paragon Press, Stardust, and the Watershed Review, a play in Iris Literary Journal, and poetry in the Dewdrop, Wild Roof, and a Flying Ketchup Press anthology collection. He is also an established, award-winning fine art photographer, whose black and white pictures have been exhibited in galleries across New York, Minneapolis, and Santa Monica.