Press Release, Iridescent Publishing, 18 June 2012
In a special one-day promotion, the ebook version of William M Johnson’s critically acclaimed end-of-the-world satire, Making a Killing, will be available free on Amazon on Wednesday 20 June.
Those wishing to take advantage of the offer can download the book from https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0088CGHRM
The republication of Making a Killing by Iridescent Publishing marks the 20th anniversary of the Earth Summit (June 20-22), as some 50,000+ dignitaries, bureaucrats, scientists, nature managers, conservationists, business leaders, celebrities, and the world’s press once again descend upon glamorous Rio de Janeiro for the UN’s “Rio+20” Earth Summit II — billed as a ‘once in a lifetime opportunity’ to save the planet.
With elephant-hunting royalty again in the news, nature managers insisting that endangered species must be made to pay for their own conservation, sea levels on the rise and deserts on the march, the frenetic political escapism, corporate wheeling and dealing, and media frenzy that Making a Killing flayed back in 1996, are if anything even more acute today — and just as deserving of this satire’s poison-tipped pen.
For those without dedicated e-readers (Kindles, iPads etc.), Amazon also provides free applications so that Kindle books can be read on Macs and PCs, smartphones and tablets. These reader apps can be downloaded from Amazon here.
Making a Killing
An End of the World Black Comedy, ‘the deepest shade of noir…’ — BBC Wildlife
‘[A] highly original, often unexpectedly witty but frightening tale of man’s destruction of the Earth and his seeming indifference to the fate of all creatures but his own. This sharp, brilliantly observed book deserves a wide audience.’ — Virginia McKenna
‘A mind-blowing and witty exposé… A no-holds barred, no mercy account of the conservation mercenaries’ (Have Bad News — Will Travel — First Class) successful efforts to get a rich living from a dying planet… A ‘must’ for the guilty and the innocent so that lessons can be learned before it is too late.’ — Ian MacPhail, a founder of World Wildlife Fund (WWF)
For further information: https://www.iridescent-publishing.com