Semon Strobos
I
  • SEMON's WORDS
  • EMS
  • Novels & Essays
  • Blogorrhea
  • Children's
  • Untitled
  • Vatertotenlieder
  • Published Books
THE OTHER BEARS is a novel about a group of college age American expats in Europe during the Viet Nam era
​amazon.com/book/semon strobos
TRIAGE is a novel about a gifted, privileged but disturbed brother and sister who move to Texas, he to start a business, she to race on the US Olympic bicycle team.
amazon.com/books/semon strobos
The Ivory Torture DISCORD OF THE BARBARIANS is a comic novella about a struggling group of graduate students/part time faculty teaching at Armpit Jr College in Boston. 

amazon.com/books/semon strobos

attempts is a collection of personal essays about EMS, bike racing, philosophy, parenting; some humorous, others serious.

Short Work is a collection oof short stories and other short form fictions.

Thousand Doors is a novel about a school teacher and his wife, covering marital discord, social life, parenting, affairs, family; set in the 70s in New York, narrated in the whiny, comic voice of the protagonist.
​
Nothing to Declare is a thriller.  A CPA reluctantly stumbles into a career laundering money.  His avocation, martial arts, keeps him afloat, as his marriage is also failing, and his daughter estranged.  He hits retirement age to find his wife divorcing him, but also in possession of 12 million untraceable $ destined for laundry.  He elects to abscond with the money; adopt a new identity in Italy.  Several proficient operators try to track him down.  Evert's martial arts skills and some new, equally dubious friends also making use of Swiss banks help him evade capture  For now
​.
Three books cover my emergency calls during my career as paramedic on an ambulance.  The calls vary from the comic or even ludicrous to inspiring or horrific.  The books are written by, for and about paramedics, and paint a vivid picture of emergency medicine in the field.
Earn Money Sleeping (old paramedic joke. Working 24 hour shifts after only 48 hours off, medics sleep whenever they can, even in an ambulance running hot to a distant call.
​Unreadable Traffic
Computer Aided Despair

Amazon.com/books/semon strobos






​
Proudly powered by Weebly