Ed Naha
Personal Information
Description
Ed Naha is an American science fiction and mystery writer and producer. He was born June 10, 1950 in the town of Linden, New Jersey. His first known publication was artwork that appeared in the first issue of Modern Monsters magazine, dated June 1966. His early career was as a journalist, writing pieces about film and rock music for American magazines. He worked as publicist for music records producers and also produced records on his own. Naha worked as a staff writer and editor for the science fiction film magazine Starlog. Under the pseudonym Joe Bonham, he edited the first issue of Starlog's sister magazine, the popular horror film magazine Fangoria. Naha has written more than 25 novels in the horror, mystery and science fiction genres. His mystery novel Cracking Up was nominated for the Edgar Award for "Best Paperback Original" by the Mystery Writers of America in 1992. - Wikipedia
Books
John Lennon And The Beatles Forever
The man, his music, the tragedy. Includes rare photos
The paradise plot
Paradise in the year 2000 or an eternity of Hell? Welcome to Island One, the first human colony in space, man's boldest thrust into the heavens, the last hope of an over-burdened Earth. Meet Harry Porter, ace newsman, as he uncovers the lurid truth behind Island One - the black secret of its past, mounting hysteria in the face of ritualistic mass murder, a desperate power game for survival - and the Children of Light, deadly mutants with telepathic tentacles that probe human minds and turn the hope of the future into an orgy of terror.
The Suicide Plague
All over America thousands of kids were jumping off buildings. Ace reporter Harry Porter had the only lead. All he knew was that it somehow involved the Church of the Ancient Astronauts, a conspiracy to kill the President, and the imminent threat of nuclear war. Harry Porter was the last of a dying breed, a hard-drinking, womanizing print journalist in an age of tranx bars and "happy news" video. He had the biggest scoop of his checkered career if he lived long enough to file it.
