Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Virtual Book Tour & Giveaway: Sins of the Father (Detective Nathan Parker, #4) by James L'Etoile

Sins of the Father by James L'Etoile Banner

SINS OF THE FATHER

by James L'Etoile

August 4 - 29, 2025 Virtual Book Tour

Synopsis:

Sins of the Father by James L'Etoile

THE NATHAN PARKER DETECTIVE NOVEL SERIES

 

Detective Nathan Parker discovers an unidentified man tossed to his death from an airplane is connected to the emergence of a new criminal organization, Red Dawn, when a secretive Joint Terrorism Task Force appears in Phoenix. The leader of the Task Force coerces Parker to support their efforts or his ex-coyote friend, Billie Carson, could face federal charges for supporting a terrorist organization. With Billie’s freedom in jeopardy, Parker agrees and one-by-one, people associated with the Task Force are picked off. When a target close to Parker is attacked, and the Task Force leader vanishes, Parker seeks help from an unusual ally to expose Red Dawn's mastermind. Familiar foes, lies, secrets, and a father’s sin converge in a deadly standoff.

Book Details:

Genre: Thriller; Police Procedural
Published by: Level Best Books
Publication Date: July 15, 2025
Number of Pages: 320
ISBN: 978-1-68512-992-7
Series: The Detective Nathan Parker Novels, Book 4
Book Links: Amazon | Goodreads

Dead Drop by James L'Etoile
Amazon | BookBub | Goodreads
Devil Within by James L'Etoile
Amazon | BookBub | Goodreads
Served Cold by James L'Etoile
Amazon | BookBub | Goodreads

Read an excerpt:

Chapter One

Death to a ten-year-old is a pause in a video game. It’s temporary. A momentary setback until you’re back into the game again. At their age, the boys of Boy Scout Troop 116 thought they were immortal. Or they did until they got their first glimpse of human remains.

Ken Dryden stood on the brakes, sending the fifteen-passenger van into a skid on the hard-packed desert road. A flock of eight turkey vultures pecked and tore hunks of flesh from their prey. The enormous birds didn’t budge at the approach of the speeding white passenger van. Only one bothered to look up with a flap of meat hanging from its curved beak.

The birds ignored a loud burst from the van’s horn. Dryden unbuckled and turned to the eight boys in the back. “Stay here.”

Dryden and the assistant scoutmaster, Bill Cope stepped from the van and approached the circle of birds.

“Must’ve found themselves a coyote or something,” Cope said. “Why you insist we take this road? It’s in the middle of—”

“This can’t be…” Dryden trailed off and crept toward the flock of scavengers.

“Whatever they found, they sure don’t want to give it up,” Dryden said as he waved his arms trying to chase the birds off the road.”

“Don’t blame them. Pickings are probably a bit thin out here.”

From behind, a high-pitched voice called out. “Oh, cool. What did they kill?”

Dryden turned and three ten-year-old boys stood a few feet away gawking at the feeding frenzy on the hardscrabble dirt road.

“I told you guys to wait in the van.”

“What did they find?” The tallest boy asked.

“Probably a coyote or something run over on the road, Chase.”

“There’s no tracks in the dirt but ours,” Chase said.

The birds fought and squawked at one another, tearing bits of flesh out from the beaks of weaker birds in the flock. Wings flared and cupped over the remains, claiming them.

“Mr. Dryden? What’s that?” Chase asked.

“What?”

“That,” the boy said with a trembling finger, pointing toward the largest vulture with a torn hunk of flesh hanging from its red beak.

Dryden followed the boy’s line of sight and under the bird’s talons were the remains. He felt sick when he saw it. A brown work boot. Coyotes didn’t wear boots.

“Oh my God.”

“Is it a dead person? Chase said.

“Back to the van boys,” Cope said.

“But—”

“Now!” Dryden barked the order, and the three scouts scurried back to the van.

“Why did you take us on this back road to begin with? What do we do now?” Cope asked Dryden. The two adult supervisors of this scout troop stood at the desert crossroads.

Cope pulled out his cell phone. “No signal out here. We need to call 911.”

Dryden looked back to the van and all eight boys pressed up against the windows gawking at the human remains as the carrion birds devoured their treasure.

“We gotta get them outta here,” Dryden said.

He charged the birds, and most of them backed away. Dryden got a good look at what lay in the desert crossroads—a man, twisted, mangled, and broken. Huge swaths of flesh torn away by the feeding birds. Dryden’s shoulders drooped at the sight—a dead man left in the crossroads.

“I’ll try and keep them away. Drive the boys back out to Quartzite. Call 911. I’ll wait.”

“You wanna stay out here? In this heat?” Cope said.

“It’s early, the heat won’t top out for a couple of hours. I’ll take my pack and all the water we can spare. I’ll be fine. There’s a little shade over there under that Palo Verde.”

Tall, dry creosote brush and a few taller gangly green Palo Verde trees and Saguaro cactus lined the crossroads

“You sure? It’s not like you can help that guy?”

“Whoever he is, he doesn’t deserve to get eaten by these feathered desert rats either. How would you feel if it was someone you knew?”

Dryden retrieved his day pack and two canteens from the van.

“Guys, Mr. Cope is going to take you out. He’ll stop in Quartzite for a pee break.”

“I’ll stay with you, Mr. Dryden,” Chase said.

“Everyone’s going with Mr. Cope.”

A sigh of disappointment filled the back of the van. Dryden knew Chase’s mother was going to meltdown over her precious offspring’s exposure to the dark fringes of life. He figured the Scottsdale socialite would spirit her son away to a resort in Sedona for a crystal bath and chakra realignment.

Dryden hefted his pack and slung the canteens over his shoulder while the van cut a three-point turn and returned in the direction they came.

Once the dust and engine noise died down, all that remained was the breeze cutting through the dried brush and the cackling of the vultures fighting over their prize.

Setting his pack down, Dryden broke off a creosote branch and swung it in front of him forcing the birds away from the remains. Reluctantly, the birds gave up and hopped to the other side of the crossroads.

Dryden closed in on the dead man and grimaced at the mess the vultures made. Unrecognizable. Legs twisted and folded under the body, with a boot sticking out at an impossible angle. No way Chase would earn his first aid merit badge here.

The arms were flayed out over his broken head.

“Oh God.”

Dryden noted the wrists bound with zip ties. This wasn’t a lost hiker. This was a murder victim.

He snatched his cell phone and tried calling Cope to warn him, but the screen reminded him there was no cell signal out here. He shot a series of photos of the dead man, figuring the police would want to see what they found before the vultures could finish it off.

Dryden backed off into the shade and moved out when the vultures grew brave enough to advance. Back and forth for an hour until Dryden spotted a dust trail.

It was too soon for Cope to have summoned help. Quartzite was more than an hour away and the authorities would need time to respond after Cope called them. And this dust plume was coming from the other direction and building fast.

A dead man. Murdered. Alone in the desert. Only a twinge of relief. It wasn’t someone he knew. He knew what that kind of loss felt like and felt guilty about feeling thankful. The dust plume was coming in fast and there was the faint whine of an ATV engine—high pitched and loud.

Dryden snatched his pack and blended into the brush along a game trail, hoping he didn’t encounter an unfriendly javelina. Fifty feet from the road, he hunched down as a green ATV tore into the crossroads and skidded to a stop a few feet away from the body.

Two men stepped from the six-wheel ATV, and one used a bulky satellite phone. After a quick call, the two men donned gloves and picked up the remains, tossing them into the rear cargo compartment of the ATV. They weren’t gentle about it—they were hurried. They needed several trips to gather the bits and pieces.

Once they finished loading the dead man, they sped off in the direction they came from.

Dryden waited until the dust plume died down before he stepped out from his hiding place. He approached the spot in the center of the crossroads where the body had been. There was little to prove a life ended there. The red dirt was marked by a dark circle—what Dryden believed was blood. A single human finger was left behind by the men on the ATV.

A second trail of dust appeared on the horizon in the direction Cope and the boys used on their way out.

Dryden sank back into the brush again until the Black and Yellow Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office SUV pulled to a stop near the intersection.

He couldn’t stop thinking about the finger. Had they left the finger by mistake, or was it a message?

Chapter Two

Sergeant Nathan Parker, the detective leading the Maricopa County Major Crimes unit, pulled his county-issued SUV to a stop at the dirt crossroads.

“You sure this is the spot?”

Cope, the assistant scoutmaster, had ridden along with him to make sure Parker found the exact location. One of the parents met Cope in Quartzite and drove the van of excited boys back to Scottsdale while Cope waited for someone from the sheriff’s office.

“I’m certain. I mean, I think I am. The dead man was right in the center of the intersection.” He pointed ahead. “There. See the dark spot in the dirt?”

Parker opened his door and stepped from the SUV.

“Didn’t you say your friend was supposed to be here watching over the remains? They didn’t both walk off, did they?”

Parker thought he’d been brought out on a desert snipe hunt of sorts if it weren’t for Cope’s dead serious demeanor. The man definitely believed he saw a body out here in the remote section of the desert south of the Hummingbird Wilderness Area.

Walking toward the spot Cope pointed out, Parker figured the man panicked when he came across the scavenged remains of a road kill animal. It wasn’t unusual for deer, coyotes, or javelina to wander down from the wilderness.

Cope got out of the SUV when Parker reached the spot. It was blood-soaked. But there wasn’t anything to point to a human origin. What was odd was a set of narrow tracks, tracks with deep aggressive off-road tread, circling near the blood spill. Two sets of footprints ran from the tire tracks to the dark dirt patch.

“Where’d it go?” Cope asked a few paces behind Parker.

A rustle and snap in the brush to their left caught their attention. It sounded too large for the small game which thrived in the creosote brush. Seconds later, a man emerged from behind a tangle of Palo Verde branches.

“Ken! You all right?” Cope called out to his friend.

Dryden was red-faced and breathing fast when he stepped onto the road surface.

“Deputy. Two men. Took him,” Dryden said in between ragged breaths.

“Ken? Where’s your pack? Your water?” Cope asked.

Dryden shot a finger to the brush where he’d emerged. “Dropped them.”

Parker noted the man wasn’t sweating in the hundred-degree heat and showed signs of heat stroke.

“Let’s load him in the SUV. Get him some water and let him cool off.”

Cope helped his weak friend back to the passenger side of the SUV while Parker looked at the dried, darkened dirt patch for a moment. Something bled out here, but there wasn’t anything to tell the story of what might have been.

Parker joined the two men at the SUV. Cope had gotten his friend into the passenger seat and found the case of bottled water Parker kept in the backseat. Heat related sickness was a deadly threat in the desert. Last year, six-hundred-forty-five people died in Maricopa County from heat stroke and exposure.

Cope handed Parker a cell phone. “It’s Ken’s. He captured these.”

The small phone screen displayed a disturbing image of a man, freshly disfigured and broken.

“You saw this?”

Cope shook his head. “Yeah and so did the kids. What happened to him? I mean. He’s—did the vultures do the damage?”

Parker slid his thumb to the next photo. The one showing the man’s hands bound.

“Definitely not.” Parker couldn’t explain the severity of the crushing and bone breaking trauma. It was the worst he’d seen in nearly fifteen years on the job. He’d discovered migrants left in shipping containers, Cartel assassinations, beheadings, and vehicular homicides. Nothing came close to the injuries in the photos.

“These remains were here when you left your partner behind?” Parker asked.

“They were right there, I swear. Ken wanted to stay behind and—how do you say it? Preserve the evidence. Those damn vultures were picking him apart. It didn’t seem right, you know?”

“Think he can tell us what happened to them?”

Cope looked back to the passenger seat. Dryden had his head back sipping on a bottle of water. The man was thin to begin with, an L.L. Bean shirt and day-old beard growth didn’t make him an outdoorsman.

“I don’t think he did anything with them, if that’s what you’re getting at,” Cope said.

“No. I don’t think he did. They disappeared somewhere and your friend was in the best place to see what happened.”

Parker stepped around Cope and opened the driver’s door. A waft of cool air-conditioned breeze hit him in the face. He gestured for Cope to hop in the back seat and out of the heat.

“How you feeling, Mr. Dryden?”

“Better. Thanks.” He held up the water bottle.”

“Mr. Cope here tells me when he left you behind, there was a full set of remains out there on the road. What happened to them?”

“Two men. They rode in on one of those six-wheel ATV’s from that direction.” He pointed to the road heading to the east. “They took him—the body—they grabbed up the pieces and tossed them in the back of the ATV. Then they ran back to wherever they came from.”

“They took him?”

“And they didn’t have an easy time of it. They needed a bunch of trips to get...”

“You get a look at the two guys?”

“Oh, I found this after they left.” Dryden pulled a handkerchief from his shirt pocket and handed it to Parker.

As Parker unwrapped it, Dryden said, “I couldn’t risk the vultures flying off with it.”

Parker had a bad feeling about unwrapping the package. The last fold stuck to the torn skin and tissue clinging to a human finger. He wrapped it back up carefully. He pulled a small paper evidence bag from the center console and dropped the body part in the brown paper container.

“Who could do that to a human being? Animals. Why’d they leave that behind?” Dryden said.

“Couldn’t say. Maybe they were in a hurry,’ Parker said.

“They were moving pretty fast when they left.”

Dryden’s eyes held back something. Parker figured it was shock from the discovery, or heat stroke. The guy was going to need years of therapy to get past this moment.

“I’m going to need these photos. I’ve called in our people to go over the scene. They can give you guys a ride back to civilization.”

As Parker pulled his cell phone out, Cope said, “No signal out here.”

Parker glanced at his screen and confirmed as much. Reluctantly, he reached for the SUV’s radio. Transmitting a request for crime scene technical support would alert the media hounds who monitored the channel. At least he wouldn’t be asking for a coroner to respond, which would inevitably attract news crews like bees to honey.

He made the radio call and snapped a series of photographs of the scene with his cell phone. The warm breeze coming from the south marked the potential for monsoon weather. Any evidence out here would be washed away. The deep ruts worn in the soil crossing the roadway testified flash flooding was a possibility in the remote desert drainage.

Parker caught photos of the quickly drying bloodstained soil at the center of the crossroads. The size of the stain had shrunk by half since he’d arrived at the location. The desert had a way of reclaiming any sign of life. It was the way of nature. It was the way of life in the harsh environment where man was simply another source of sustenance.

The ATV tracks leading east were disappearing in the wind-blown topsoil. The fine dust returning to its natural state. A section of tracks, sheltered by a wall of thick creosote brush, maintained the deep V pattern left by the off-road tread. Hundreds of weekend hobby riders ran their motorcycles and ATVs out in the desert on the weekends, and Parker hoped the photo would show some anomaly on the tread pattern to single out a particular vehicle. He knew it was a long shot, but he needed to cover the bases.

Finished taking photos of the area, Parker noticed a plume of smoke to the east, a dark and boiling column of smoke. He couldn’t shake the connection of the missing body and the sudden appearance of the smoke rising in the east.

Parker trotted back to the SUV, made a quick radio call reporting the smoke and possible woodland fire near the wilderness border. He tossed a traffic cone out on the desert track near the blood-soaked dirt. Maybe the crime scene analysts could find something to hint at why the body was dumped there—and why it vanished.

“How you doing, Mr. Dryden?”

“Better, thanks.”

“I want to go check this out up ahead—don’t think it’s far, maybe a couple of miles. You up for it?”

“I guess.”

“I want to get you checked out by medical, they’re on their way and they’ll meet us up the road.”

“What about the guys who moved that body? Won’t they be up there, too?”

“If they were in as much of a hurry as you said they were, probably not.”

Parker pulled the SUV into drive and swung hard around the bloodstained soil—not so much for destroying any evidence left behind, but out of reverence. A life might have ended there on the patch of dust.

Parker shot up the heavy rutted road to the east, bouncing along the trail as the dark smoke plume beckoned in the distance.

Two miles from the crossroad, Parker turned a slight corner to the right and found a small shack in flames. It was likely an abandoned decades old silver mining camp. No sign of an ATV or the two men who Dryden watched. But Parker had a bad feeling about what lay inside the burning shack.

“Stay put,” Parker said, as he pulled the SUV to a stop at a distance from the burning shack.

He grabbed a fire extinguisher from the rear of the SUV and trotted toward the structure. Most of the flames were coming from the inside of the wooden structure. They had burned up and through what remained of the wooden roof.

He shot a burst of white powder from the extinguisher at the doorframe, and the tendrils diminished for a moment. Enough for him to spot human remains on the floor in the center of the blaze.

***

Excerpt from Sins of the Father by James L'Etoile. Copyright 2025 by James L'Etoile. Reproduced with permission from James L'Etoile. All rights reserved.

 

 

Author Bio:

James L'Etoile

James L’Etoile uses his twenty-nine years behind bars as an influence in his award-winning novels, short stories, and screenplays. He is a former associate warden in a maximum-security prison, a hostage negotiator, and director of California’s state parole system. His novels have been shortlisted or awarded the Lefty, Anthony, Silver Falchion, and the Public Safety Writers Award. River of Lies, Served Cold, and Sins of the Father are his most recent novels. Look for Illusion of Truth coming soon.

Find out more at:

www.jamesletoile.com
Prison to the Page Newsletter
Amazon Author Profile
Goodreads
BookBub: @crimewriter
Instagram: @authorjamesletoile
Threads: @authorjamesletoile
X: @JamesLEtoile
Facebook: @AuthorJamesLetoile
BlueSky: @jamesletoile.bsky.social

 

 

Review:

5 stars!

A threat from Parker’s past teams up with a dangerous new foe. 

Sins of the Father is the fourth book in author James L’Etoile’s gripping Detective Nathan Parker series, and pits the canny lawman against a merciless new foe: a seemingly all-knowing and unstoppable criminal organization that even has the Mexican cartels on defense. While investigating a corpse found at a desert crossroads by a vanload of Boy Scouts and their leaders, Detective Sergeant Nathan Parker of the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office inadvertently gets involved in a federal Joint Terrorism Task Force operation. After being arm-twisted into working with them, he suddenly finds himself on his own and back in charge of the case when the task force is discovered to be compromised and Red Dawn, the very organization they’re hunting, abducts their loose cannon of a group leader. 

What a great story! The complex plot is full of surprising twists and turns that reach several years back to the murder of Nathan’s former partner, Josh McMillan. His coworker and close friend died in Nathan’s arms, and it has taken him a lot of time and professional help to begin to cope with the emotional trauma. When another detective is critically wounded while working with him on this new case, Nathan quickly realizes he and the man’s partner, Barry Johns, are emotionally vulnerable and should seek out support as soon as they are able. The secondary plot about the experiences of the wounded detective and his wife, forever waiting in the hospital, was so accurately portrayed that it was almost difficult to read. 

The activities of Red Dawn drew in a perplexing cross-section of Phoenix’s society. Multi-millionaires running foundations, rich college students chasing a good time, immigrants minding their own business, and even Nathan’s old friend and Miguel’s boss, the former coyote, Billie Carson, appear to have nothing in common at first, but connections slowly come to light as Nathan and his team follow the clues. Nathan is smart, persistent, and persuasive, putting together a cohesive team that includes both his former and current girlfriends, FBI Special Agent-in-Charge Lynnette Finch and Deputy Linda Hunt. 

The relationship between Nathan and Linda continues to deepen, progressing to the point where she and Leon are considering moving in with him and Miguel. Their love for each other and their sons is strong, both having overcome baggage from their pasts. This case definitely puts their connection to the test. In addition, I really loved seeing how Nathan’s relationship with his adopted son, Miguel, has normalized to a natural father-son feeling, and they’ve developed a solid family unit. 

With its strong personal storyline and complex criminal investigation, I recommend SINS OF THE FATHER to readers of mysteries and thrillers, especially those who enjoy a good police procedural with an emotional personal story.



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Book Review: The Spirit of Vanderlaan (Samantha Hayes, #1) by Susan Harris Howell

The Spirit of Vanderlaan (The Samantha Hayes Series Book 1)The Spirit of Vanderlaan by Susan Harris Howell
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

A fun, quirky start to a warm, non-traditional new mystery series.

The Spirit of Vanderlaan is the first book in author Susan Harris Howell’s new mystery series featuring the nurturing university psychology professor, Dr. Samantha Hayes. In this first adventure, supernatural experiences on campus involving her and her students, including some more than coincidental room assignments linked to the professor’s past, have them puzzled. This was a perfect kick-back, relax, and enjoy book for the end of my day, and I found the story warm, nostalgic, and completely engaging.

Samantha Hayes is a delight, and she is absolutely surrounded by outstanding supporting characters, especially her cadre of teaching assistants and the small knot of students who are regulars in her classes and during her office hours. I enjoyed the easy camaraderie that developed between Samantha and her students and was reminded of my college days with the fun and thoughtful mentors and friends I met while in school. I had to laugh at an incident early in the book where Samantha had to adjust a disgruntled and privileged student’s demands for service! I really look forward to seeing more of this crew.

I recommend THE SPIRIT OF VANDERLAAN to readers of cozy paranormal tales.

I voluntarily reviewed this after receiving an Advance Review Copy from the author through Great Escapes Virtual Book Tours.


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Tuesday, August 12, 2025

Book Review: To Rescue a Witch (Tales of the Witchborn, #2) by Lisa A. Traugott

To Rescue a WitchTo Rescue a Witch by Lisa A. Traugott
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Absorbing tale of treachery, betrayal, secrets kept and long overdue to be revealed.

To Rescue a Witch by Lisa A. Traugott is an absorbing tale set in 1730s England and America’s Virginia colony, with treachery, betrayal, and revenge all in play because of an aristocrat’s young illegitimate daughter. Scottish attorney William MacLeod travels from England to Virginia and back again as he seeks to take the girl to her biological father, Lord George Hallewell, her origins and existence steeped in secrets, some of which William himself is responsible.

The story is fast-paced, urged along from multiple points of view, with the main plot narrated through the eyes of William and the traumatized and abused child, Annaliese. The story is often brutal, with repeated incidents of sexual assault and other physical abuses of the young girl. The story is historical fiction about the weak, vulnerable, and powerless at its grittiest. Annaliese is viewed as chattel, no different than livestock, and she grows up knowing only the pain and abuse meted out by her stepfather and his creditors. She is ignorant of how to live in society, struggling with proper language, comportment, or even how to dress herself in the accepted clothing of the day.

William’s wife, Fiona, is home in Scotland, keeping their family and the estate together. She’s a skilled wise woman who works secretly, having promised her husband to refrain from practicing the more magical aspects of her knowledge because witchcraft is illegal. She struggles with visions of the future that are sometimes unclear but always true in the end.

William has his own struggles. He has a dark capacity for violence lurking just under the surface that he’s released on several occasions at the behest of his old friend and employer, Lord Hallewell. He’s trained as an attorney and is normally a kind and generous man. These bouts of brutality are constantly at odds with his true nature.

However, William is not the villain of the piece. Besides, Annaliese’s horrible stepfather is Lady Margaret Hallewell, the wife of Lord George. I found her to be a fascinating and despicable character, scheming and manipulative, using every womanly wile available to gain the advantage over the men in her life, and she’ll stop at nothing for her revenge, including destroying her husband, William, Fiona, and a little nine-and-a-half-year-old girl.

The story contains vivid descriptions and details of life on land and at sea during this time. To modern eyes, it is dirty, dangerous, and brutal in many ways, but there are glimpses of unimaginable splendor and wealth in the aristocratic circles. The lack of autonomy, freedom, and power is shown in frightening detail with respect to the indentured, enslaved, and married women.

I recommend TO RESCUE A WITCH to readers of historical fiction who like action and adventure and are interested in stories of witchcraft and witch trials.

I voluntarily reviewed this after receiving an Advanced Review Copy from the author through Lone Star Book Blog Tours.



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Virtual Book Tour & Giveaway: The Path of Redemption (The Chaos Trilogy, Book Three) by Tom Haward


THE PATH OF REDEMPTION
by

Tom Haward


This post is part of a virtual book tour organized by
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Alternate History
Publisher: Cinnabar Moth Publishing, LLC.
Publication Date: August 5, 2025
Page count: 292 pages


SCROLL DOWN FOR GIVEAWAY!


SYNOPSIS:


With Grand Protector Faust missing and Caesar dead, Senator Frigus is trying to hold the fraying threads of the Empire together by keeping this information secret. The Empire is already fragile, and if the truth spills onto the streets of Rome and beyond, the Empire could crumble. 

Faust is prisoner of the giant Bjorn Askå and his cellmate is the rebel leader, Boatman King. Abducted by Askå, they’re now part of his grand plan to rule the entire world, with the Empire his next target. Can Faust and Boatman forge an alliance or are their own ambitions stronger than any desire for a truce? 

A continent away, Bella, Maverick and the other rebels have escaped to the RIA where they lick their wounds from the disaster of Faust and Askå’s attack on their underground headquarters. They believe they have covered their tracks and hope the 35, leaders of the RIA, will equip them to take the fight to Rome again, this time with the advantage of surprise. 

Olivia King, though, she is tired of the fight. Traumatised from being tortured at the hands of Maximus Nero and conflicted about her husband’s relentless desire to crush Rome, she is unsure whether she has the energy to keep fighting those who have caused her so much pain. 

With the world and its people in turmoil, one thing is for certain: chaos remains in a world needing redemption.

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ENJOY AN EXCERPT:

Southwark London 2030 

Marcus flipped his eyepiece up and walked away from the vantage point he’d found for spying on what Maximus was doing. There were other crosses lining London Bridge, but in the cold January night, the bodies nailed to those crosses were quiet. If any were still alive, they were conserving energy, swapping between trying to breathe and trying to push themselves up on their nailed feet so their lungs were able to intake some life-saving oxygen. The orange glow of streetlights showed the odd misty puff of breath feebly forming and then dispersing, like death swatting away the attempt at clinging on to life.
 
Indeed, the early morning, just before the arrival of dawn, was quiet. Quiet didn’t mean calm and he was feeling the pulse of adrenaline rushing through him. All the soldiers around him were because if they were guarding the son of Caesar then there was a good chance rebels would be appearing. It wasn’t guaranteed, but Maximus wanted to make a show of crucifying someone, and he believed twenty-five soldiers as his protection was a necessary element to that. 

When Marcus and his comrades were called up to be ready to go immediately, a few soldiers pulled out their phones and texted their loved ones saying they were going on a dangerous shift and to be prepared. Marcus scoffed at their fear and told them so. The response was that Marcus was new to this city, and he should prepare himself for encountering Boatman King or The Beast, because that encounter would likely be his last on this earth.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Tom Haward was born in Essex and at 4 months old he and his identical twin were adopted into an oyster farming family. Tom now runs the business as generation eight of Haward oyster farmers.  He has a fiancée, baby daughter and a cockapoo. 

Tom has an MA in Creative Writing and has loved telling stories since he was a child, whether verbally or through prose. 

The Path of Chaos was his debut novel. He is also working on a six-episode comedy screenplay and tweets passionately about his family’s industry and the challenges it faces.

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GUEST POST:

Please welcome Tom Haward, the author of our featured book, to the blog today!


Things that inspire me and why

by Tom Haward

 

The nuances of humanity are my main inspiration. That might sound like I have just walked out of a philosophy class, but my psyche is piqued by the little things that people do. I find I am best able to write (and write well) when I am somewhere where there is lot of human interaction going on. And that usually happens for me in one of my local pubs. The rambunctious laughter in my local pub from a table (like I am hearing as I write this), or the hushed words of someone sharing a secret in public. I love those very human behaviours which have people at their most exposed. We can all wear masks in certain social situations, but I find a British pub, that’s busy with punters will be a place where you see the most genuine aspect of humanity. And being in that inspires me to write.

I can’t write in complete silence. I find it unnerving and unnatural. For many years I romanticised about taking a retreat somewhere secluded, by a lake and writing a novel with no distractions and just the natural flow of nature propelling my word count. I didn’t go on a retreat but took some time in random, quiet spots, in the middle of nowhere and found my word count usually amounted to zero. My books, like The Path of Redemption, are dialogue heavy; dialogue has always been the strongest aspect to my writing and in order to write genuine dialogue I realised I needed to hear people chatting as I was writing. Being in solitude meant it made it harder for me to imagine a normal conversation. Being in a busy pub meant (and means) I can draw from the natural conversations happening around me and ensure the dialogue I craft is as natural as possible and not forced or wooden.

People chatting nonsense on a night out are my inspiration because they help me craft encounters which flow and aren’t stunted and robotic.

If you are an aspiring writer, I would always recommend sitting somewhere public and letting the conversations around you inspire the words you put on paper.


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Children's Book Review: Grandma Yogini by Raven Howell

Grandma YoginiGrandma Yogini by Raven Howell
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This talented grandma is full of surprises!

Grandma Yogini is a new children’s picture book by Raven Howell and illustrated by Alexander Santos and would be a perfect story for grandma to share with her young grandchildren. Visits from your grandmother are always a special time, but Meredith and Henry’s grandma is extra special and full of surprises!

While their friends’ grandmothers all have their specialties, for example, Anthony’s grandmother bakes cookies, Henry and Meredith’s grandmother is unlike all the others. Even though she’s white-haired, the older woman surprises the kids right from the start by arriving on her bright red motorbike. Grandma is lively and vibrant, her personality brought to life by the vivid drawings of Alexander Santos. Grandma delights her grandchildren and their friends with enthusiastic attention and by introducing them to her practice of yoga. Grandma is a yogini, another name for a yogi or practitioner of yoga. She engages their imaginations with some simple yoga poses that mimic creatures familiar to the children, such as a butterfly, cat, and even a kangaroo.

With its clean, clear illustrations and engaging story, I recommend GRANDMA YOGINI to young-at-heart grandmothers for sharing with their young grandchildren.

I voluntarily reviewed this after receiving an Advance Review Copy through WOW! Women On Writing Book Tours.


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Monday, August 11, 2025

Book Review: To Condemn a Witch (Tales of the Witchborn, #1) by Lisa A. Traugott

To Condemn a WitchTo Condemn a Witch by Lisa A. Traugott
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A gripping but grim tale of witches pursued by evil men in search of wealth and power.

To Condemn a Witch, although the second book published in author Lisa A. Traugott’s gripping Tales of the Witchborn series, is chronologically a prequel to last year’s To Rescue a Witch. This complex novel tells the backstories of many of the main characters of the earlier book, most specifically that of Eleanor, the Scottish orphan who went from the workhouse to the arms of a handsome married nobleman to banishment and a difficult life in the Virginia colony. Due to the complex nature of the plot, this proves to be a massive undertaking. While sounding like a romantic cautionary tale of historical fiction, the story takes a different, darker, and much more intriguing path, combining the political power gaming of rich nobles with the presence of witches and witchcraft.

For the most part, all the main characters are surprisingly unlikable creatures. Eleanor, while a tragic figure on the one hand, is immature and manipulative on the other. Her paramour, Lord George Hallewell, who has also risen from the ashes of family tragedy, is weak, needy, disloyal, and greedy, while his wife, Lady Margaret Hallewell, is grasping, greedy, bored, and cruel. William MacLeod, the Scottish laird and attorney I so wanted to be the steadfast hero of the piece, while a strong figure, is a “fixer” for the noble privileged and often resorts to violent means to achieve his ends. His loving marriage to Fiona, a natural witch, is laced with neglect, arrogance, and mixed signals as he backslides on the promises he made her at their handfasting. Fiona is inconsistent in her willingness to stand up to William at times and keeps secrets from him that she shouldn’t. Fiona’s Aunt Matilda is a doubly intriguing character, burned at the stake as a witch 20 years earlier than the events in the book, appears as a ghost, and only during the local fire festivals, when the veil between the living and the dead is thinnest. A bitter, drunk of a woman when alive, her mood hasn’t improved over the course of her half-life as it is, stuck between the physical world and the realm of the “Otherworld.” Still, she’s entertaining during her quick appearances, especially when she leaps from the ethereal to a physical presence when she occupies the body of Fiona’s poor, confused cat, Pooka. While these people may sound like terrible individuals (and some are), they are a delight when compared to the story’s villains: the aforementioned Lady Hallewell, Elspeth, Matilda’s former friend and coven sister, and the vicious witch hunter named Lord Blackmere.

Set in Kirkhaven, Scotland, and London, England, in the early 1700s, the author crafts such descriptive and realistic backdrops for the events of the story that I felt I was there. From the glittering ballrooms of the Ton to rural Scotland’s villages and manor homes to rat-infested alleyways and hovels in London or the harsh wilderness of the Virginia colony, Traugott paints living, breathing pictures of what conditions were like 300 years ago. Of course, the time period, with its vast discrepancies between classes and genders, also informs the attitudes and, therefore, many of the actions, of the main characters. The lives of the poor and working classes, and all women, held little value for the ruling class of white noblemen, so many of the characters are treated as disposable or property.

While the main characters may have low charisma scores, their stories were engaging, and I wanted to know how things resolved. However, some aspects of the characters’ histories were only hinted at for so long before they were revealed, and I began to feel like I’d missed a prequel to the prequel. Another issue that bothered me was the depiction of three-year-old Broderick MacLeod. While I realize children were expected to grow up much quicker then, I still felt Broderick seemed a couple of years more developed in his thinking, skills, and especially William’s treatment of him.

TO CONDEMN A WITCH fills in or expands on much of the previously untold pasts of the characters in the series debut. I recommend it for readers who enjoy a gritty historical fantasy featuring tales of political power seeking, witches, and witchcraft.

I voluntarily reviewed this after receiving an Advance Review Copy from the author through Lone Star Literary Life Book Campaigns.


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Virtual Book Tour & Giveaway: Whatever It Takes (Kit Hanover, #2) by Alan Brenham

Whatever It Takes by Alan Brenham Banner

WHATEVER IT TAKES

by Alan Brenham

August 11 - September 5, 2025 Virtual Book Tour

Synopsis:

Whatever It Takes by Alan Brenham

The Kit Hanover Series

 

In Las Vegas, informants learn the hard truth that snitches get stitches. Or in Myra Taylor’s case, shot and buried in the desert.

An unfortunate setback for the FBI as they try to build a case against Sonny Holman, Leon Benuzzi, and Boris Krakov. Myra wasn’t the first casualty either, so the FBI needs to step up its game to nail this slick money laundering ring. Fortunately, they have an ace up their federal sleeve in the form of a relentless homicide detective with a maverick mindset. Willing to do whatever it takes, Kit Hanover accepts an undercover assignment as an exotic dancer for Sonny Holman at his Pink Kitten Gentlemen’s Club. Although the stunning Native American detective isn’t crazy about pole dancing, she’ll put her introverted nature aside to win Sonny’s trust and find concrete evidence of his shady dealings. But working a demeaning dancing gig and being ogled by lecherous patrons aren’t Kit’s only obstacles. She’s been trying to reconnect with her estranged sister in Las Vegas, though now is hardly the best time for a family reunion. Can the FBI keep her sister safe without blowing Kit’s cover? A death at the club puts Kit on everyone’s radar, and the more she digs, the more dangerous the assignment gets, with money laundering just the beginning of the crimes that can be traced back to Sonny and his associates. With prostitution, trafficking, and murder among the offenses, Kit must navigate the escalating danger and stay alive long enough to dismantle a powerful criminal organization.

Praise for Whatever It Takes:

"Whatever It Takes by Alan Brenham launches readers into a high-stakes undercover thriller where danger lurks behind every glittering facade. Author Alan Brenham has a clear vision and control over this story world that comes through in the confident narration and construction, delivering a tightly plotted narrative that keeps the suspense building with every chapter. Once you're gripped by this story, it doesn't relinquish its hold, zooming through a pacy plot but always with the right amount of detail... highly recommended must-read for fans of fast-paced, high-risk crime thrillers featuring strong female leads."
~ Readers' Favorite - 5 star review

"Whatever It Takes is a gritty and fast-paced crime thriller that follows Fort Worth detective Kit Hanover as she's recruited by the FBI to go undercover in a seedy Las Vegas nightclub to take down an organized crime ring involved in money laundering and murder...There's a lot of emotional complexity packed in here—anger, fear, pride, loneliness—and Brenham doesn't shy away from the sleazier, more uncomfortable parts of undercover work. The club scenes are drenched in smoke, sweat, and that sense of being watched, and you can almost feel Kit's skin crawl as she tries to keep her cover intact. It's not just about the mission—it's about survival. And Kit never stops being human in the face of it all."
~ Literary Titan - 5-Star Review

Whatever It Takes Trailer:

Book Details:

Genre: Crime Fiction
Published by: Indie
Publication Date: May 12, 2025
Number of Pages: 348
ISBN: 9798283664705 (pbk)
Series: The Kit Hanover Series, Book 2
Book Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Kobo | BookShop.org | Goodreads | BookBub

Read an excerpt:

PROLOGUE

Saturday night, March 3rd

A sobbing and trembling Myra Taylor lies on the cold Nevada desert floor. Her hands are tied behind her back, and her ankles are cruelly bound. Though she cannot see the passing clouds high in the night sky, she can hear the unmistakable sounds of a shovel digging into the sand, with the earth tossed rudely to the side.

Two months ago, a chance encounter at Sprout’s Farmers Market had changed everything. The agent's offer seemed like a lifeline amidst her struggles. Her infant son’s medical bills had piled up, and the financial burden was overwhelming. Her job as an exotic dancer didn’t pay enough. The substantial amount of money the agent promised felt like a divine intervention, a means to alleviate her worries and give her son a fighting chance. But now, the single mother wishes she’d never agreed to snitch her boss, Sonny Holman, off to the FBI.

“Don’t kill me. Please don’t kill me.” The terror in her voice is unmistakable, even though the canvas hood dulls her frantic cries.

There is no response.

“Please, I’ll do anything you want. Anything at all.”

Still no response.

The twenty-seven year old brunette twists her wrists in a vain attempt to free herself. If only she could work the cord off one wrist, she could free her legs and run for it.

Then she hears a thump. Footsteps crunch in the sand, getting closer.

Her thoughts go back to her son and to the man she was in love with.

A pair of strong hands jerks her off the ground like she’s a ragdoll. “Please don’t. I have a baby boy. He’s very sick. Please let me go. I’ll be good. I’ll do anything Sonny wants. I swear.”

“You shoulda done that ‘steada rattin us out to the fuckin feds,” the man growled.

Myra finds herself thrown to the ground face-first. The impact knocks the breath out of her. She inhales, gasping in the canvas hood. The last two sounds she hears are the slam and slide of a semi-automatic handgun and the mournful howl of a lone coyote.

***

Excerpt from Whatever It Takes by Alan Brenham. Copyright 2025 by Alan Brenham. Reproduced with permission from Alan Brenham. All rights reserved.

 

 

Author Bio:

Alan Brenham

Alan Brenham is the pseudonym for Alan Behr. He served as a criminal investigator with municipal, county and federal law enforcement agencies. He also worked with the US Army in Berlin, Germany. His employments took him halfway around the world, from Russia to the Middle East and across most of Europe. Later, he was admitted to the Texas state bar and spent his legal career as a prosecutor, criminal defense attorney, and staff counsel for the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. Today he and his wife reside in the central Texas area. He has authored twelve crime fiction novels under the pen name of Alan Brenham. He is currently working on his thirteenth novel, the third book in the Kit Hanover series, titled Come And Get It.

He is a member of the International Thriller Writers, the Mystery Writers of America, and the Writers League of Texas. Awards and endorsements included a Best in Crime Fiction Award from the Texas Association of Writers for his first novel, Price of Justice. Game Piece earned a Readers Favorite gold medal. Cornered and Rampage were endorsed by NY Times Best-Selling authors, CJ Lyons and Michael McGarrity. When Things Fall Apart was a Finalist for the Silver Falchion Award for Best Investigator category at Killer Nashville 2024, the 2024 Global Book Award, and the Book Excellence Award. Literary Titan Gold Awards for Once Upon A Crime, No More Lies, Price of Justice, Every Silent Thing, Never Say A Word.

Catch Up With Alan Brenham:

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Facebook: @AlanBrenham

 

 

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Sunday, August 10, 2025

Book Review: Death at Rock Bottom (Reluctantly Psychic Murder Mystery, #2) by Kris Bock

Death at Rock Bottom (Reluctantly Psychic Murder Mystery Book 2)Death at Rock Bottom by Kris Bock
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

The museum crew is back in action, investigating the death of an old friend.

Death at Rock Bottom is the second book in author Kris Bock’s clever and unique Reluctantly Psychic Murder Mystery series featuring geologist and rock collection curator Petra Cloch and her new friends and colleagues at the quirky Banditt Museum in small Bonneville, New Mexico. When Petra’s colleague, Liberty, suspects the death of her old friend, petroleum engineer Frank Underwood, is no accident, the two enlist the help of their coworker, Haven, and the women of their monthly book club to investigate the circumstances.

Petra Clock is a likable and unique protagonist with her unusual gift and the struggles it has caused her to engage socially with others. She gets visions or impressions of a person from touching their belongings or things they’ve handled. Complications from her past have Petra in a perpetual state of anxiety, and interactions with others literally exhaust her. She’d previously discovered that the man she’d replaced at the Banditt Museum had been murdered when she’d inadvertently picked up the mineral formation that had been used to kill him. In this latest adventure, Petra uses her gift to help Liberty get to the truth behind the death of her friend, fellow rockhound and veteran desert hiker Frank Underwood.

The story moves at a fast clip as the two enlist the aid and skills of the women in their monthly book club. The investigation becomes an interesting and well-coordinated ensemble performance as each woman brings their special skills to the table. With a number of people set to benefit from Frank’s death, there is plenty of work to divvy up to eliminate suspects. While I had my eye on a particular individual, it wasn’t until the unusual final reveal that I knew for sure who the murderer was. As in the previous book, the dialogue and narrative are clever. However, there were incidents where details were repeated again and again. Readers new to the series should be able to pick up the story in this latest volume, but the first book is really an entertaining ‘must-read’ as well.

I recommend DEATH AT ROCK BOTTOM to cozy mystery readers.

I voluntarily reviewed this after receiving an Advance Review Copy from the author through Great Escapes Virtual Book Tours.




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Saturday, August 09, 2025

Book Tour & Giveaway: Times Change (Joe Mack Shadow Council Files, #5) by Gail Z. & Larry N. Martin


Joe Mack is back, solving cold cases that eluded Eliot Ness

and kicking demon butt.


Times Change

Joe Mack Shadow Council Files Book 5

by Gail Z. & Larry N. Martin

Genre: Urban Fantasy, Roaring 20s Monster Hunter



Joe Mack is back, solving cold cases that eluded Eliot Ness and kicking demon butt.

Josef Magarac was a brave man, a strong man, a hard-working immigrant who only wanted a better life for his family. Then he was murdered, and an ancient Slavic god brought him back to life, gave him new abilities, and a mission to protect those who can’t protect themselves. Now he's Joe Mack, immortal thanks to the Slavic god, and a champion against dark magic, demons, and things that go bump in the night.

Joe's previous collection of adventures spanned the Roaring Twenties and Prohibition. Now he's in the modern era, working with new partners and adjusting to a whole new century. But old cases have resurfaced, and demons never die. A supernatural serial killer has returned, and some of the evil Joe thought was done and dusted has returned to wreak havoc. It will take all of the supernatural abilities, wit, and will of Joe and his partners—past and present—to stop the dark forces once and for all. If they fail, it will unleash a wave of demonic vengeance, blood, and death unlike anything Cleveland has ever seen.

Times Change is a non-stop thrill ride full of paranormal action, found family, dark magic, and loyal friends.

 

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Forged

The Joe Mack Adventures Volume 1



When you ask a god for favors, be careful what you wish for.

You just might get it.

From the bloody steel mill strikes of Pennsylvania rose a true man of steel, a steelworker transformed into something more by the power of the old gods. Josef Magarac was a brave man, a strong man, a hard-working immigrant who only wanted a better life for his family. Then he was murdered, and an ancient Slavic god brought him back to life, gave him new abilities, and a mission to protect those who can’t protect themselves.

Now he’s Joe Mack, and together with his allies, Secret Service agent Jack West and heiress Sarah Grace McAllen Harringworth, he handles the hard cases the regular feds won’t touch like magic-wielding mobsters, Lovecraftian monsters, and secret supernatural societies.

The Joe Mack Adventures: Volume One is a non-stop thrill ride full of paranormal action, found family, dark magic, and loyal friends.

This is a collection of four books in the Joe Mack Shadow Council Files by award-winning author team Gail Z. & Larry N. Martin, authors of the Spells, Salt, & Steel and the Wasteland Marshals series. The Shadow Council Case Files are historical fantasy novellas set in the world of Quincy Harker, Demon Hunter, that tell the true stories behind the tall tales surrounding some of the world’s most famous (and infamous) folk heroes.

This collection includes CauldronBlack SunChicagoland, and Spellbound.

 

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Gail Z. Martin writes urban fantasy, epic fantasy, steampunk and more for Solaris Books, Orbit Books, Falstaff Books, SOL Publishing and Darkwind Press. Urban fantasy series include Deadly Curiosities and the Night Vigil (Sons of Darkness). Epic fantasy series include Darkhurst, the Chronicles Of The Necromancer, the Fallen Kings Cycle, the Ascendant Kingdoms Saga, and the Assassins of Landria.

Together with Larry N. Martin, she is the co-author of Iron & Blood, Storm & Fury (both Steampunk/alternate history), the Spells Salt and Steel comedic horror series, the Roaring Twenties monster hunter Joe Mack Shadow Council series, and the Wasteland Marshals near-future post-apocalyptic series. As Morgan Brice, she writes urban fantasy MM paranormal romance, with the Witchbane, Badlands, Treasure Trail, Kings of the Mountain and Fox Hollow series. Gail is also a con-runner for ConTinual, the online, ongoing multi-genre convention that never ends.

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Larry N. Martin is the author of the new sci-fi adventure novel Salvage Rat, and the new portal fantasy series, The Splintered Crown, A Tankards and Heroes novel. He is the co-author (with Gail Z. Martin) of the Spells, Salt, and Steel: New Templar Knights series; the Steampunk series Iron & Blood; and a collection of short stories and novellas: The Storm & Fury Adventures set in the Iron & Blood universe. He is also the co-author (with Gail) of the Wasteland Marshals series and the Joe Mack Shadow Council series from Falstaff Books.

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The Martins have three children, a Maltese, and a Golden Retriever.



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Friday, August 08, 2025

Book Tour & Giveaway: TimeLock series by Howard Berk & Peter Berk


A sci-fi-tinged action-adventure with heart and humor, the TimeLock series is set in the crime-ridden near future where a bold new technology transforms the justice system and challenges America’s moral compass. Only one problem—what happens if you’re innocent? 

The Millennium Paradox

TimeLock Book 3

by Howard Berk & Peter Berk

Genre: SciFi Action Adventure



The Award-Winning series co-written by award-winning writer Howard Berk (“Columbo,” “Mission: Impossible”) and Peter Berk. 

 

Newly relocated to the charming Alaskan town of Caribou Bay after bidding farewell to his best friends Morgan and Janine Eberly, Yoshi Ito inadvertently prompts his boss, geneticist Dr. Emory Layton, to try a new genetic acceleration protocol in a local prison. Using technology from the TimeLock process, the experiment goes awry.

Instead of yielding the desired medical benefits, it generates a terrifying outcome that infuses a convicted killer with superhuman powers.

As the killer begins to exact revenge upon his enemies, local helicopter pilot Tom Brooks recruits the Eberlys’ help to stop the unstoppable force before the residents of Caribou Bay—and possibly the whole world—are forever at the killer’s mercy.

 

**NEW RELEASE!!**

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The Kyoto Conspiracy

TimeLock Series Book 2


TimeLock stole twenty years from Morgan Eberly’s life. A terrifying new version of the radical technology might just end it. 

Two years after the events of TimeLock, a new and unhinged president of the United States approves an immoral and illegal plan to develop a weaponized form of the TimeLock process for use on the battlefield. But only one man, geneticist Dr. Lionel Garvey, can execute the program. When both he and his wife Kiyoko are kidnapped in Kyoto, Japan, Morgan and FBI Agent Janine Price receive a frantic text from Kiyoko’s brother, Yoshi.

Realizing they can’t trust anyone in their own government, Morgan and Janine fly to Japan and team up with Yoshi for an unauthorized rescue mission. After a daring raid of a research facility in Japan, the trio realize they have only delayed the president's insane plan. They must now execute a dangerous assault on a frozen corner of Siberia to accomplish their mission. Can Morgan and Janine stop the president from unleashing a newly weaponized version of TimeLock before it’s too late? 

 

"A deftly crafted dystopian style science fiction suspense thriller of a novel, "TimeLock" by the team of Howard and Peter Berk is a compulsive page turner of a read from cover to cover and unreservedly recommended . . ."  --Midwest Book Review (TimeLock)

 

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TimeLock

TimeLock Series Book 1


When everyman Morgan Eberly is arrested for a murder he didn’t commit, he’s subjected to an experimental new technology that instantly ages prisoners the number of years of their sentence. Now 43 and on the run, can Morgan and rogue FBI agent Janine Price unlock the truth about TimeLock before it’s too late to turn back?

An innocent man. A radical punishment. The clock is ticking . . .

With crime rampant, the President authorizes a hugely controversial program: TimeLock, a cellular acceleration process whereby select prisoners are instantly aged the total number of years of their sentence. In other words - three strikes and you’re old…very old.

A sci-fi-tinged action-adventure with heart and humor, TimeLock is the first in a new series of novellas set in the crime-ridden near future where a bold new technology transforms the justice system and challenges America’s moral compass. Only one problem—what happens if you’re innocent? 

  

What Readers are saying about the series:

 

TimeLock is a high-octane action thriller with a classic feel, reminiscent of Michael Crichton or Tom Clancy. It’s familiar, but in all the right ways. 

The central concept is brilliant . . . The novella is tightly paced, and there’s not a dull moment. . . .The introduction is particularly engaging, with an absolutely killer prologue that sucks you in right from the start. Reading TimeLock, I felt like I was watching a movie . . . It’s a crowd-pleasing blockbuster of a novella, with all the thrills you’d hope for, and a cracking start to a series.  Read the full review

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ 
Whoa!! Okay so this was awesome and I have to say first off- I hope like hell someone picks this up to make a movie or a show out of it!! This was a super interesting premise so I was hooked. It moved at a great pace and I was on the edge of my seat the whole time.  - Book Blogger @gryffindorbookishnerd

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ 
I vastly enjoyed this quick read . . .  The writing was keenly honed and smartly detailed  . . . In sum, was a well-plotted and shrewdly paced action-packed thriller featuring slightly frayed characters and storylines that were cleverly laced together with wry humor and witty snark. 
- Empress DJ/Honolulubelle, Books and Binding Book Reviews

 

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An award-winning novelist and screenwriter, Howard Berk’s credits include memorable episodes of such classic TV series as “Columbo,” (including “By Dawn’s Early Light,” for which guest star Patrick McGoohan won an Emmy), “Mission: Impossible,” “The Rockford Files,” “The Fall Guy,” “The New Mike Hammer” and “The Contender,” starring “V” and “The Beastmaster” lead Marc Singer. Howard Berk also wrote the feature film, “Target,” starring Gene Hackman and Matt Dillon. 

Peter Berk has written six novels, three TV pilots and a dozen screenplays, including several with his father, Howard Berk, which became the basis for the TimeLock series of novels. IE also published Peter’s political murder mystery, First Line of Defense and will publish his forthcoming novel, Fireline. Peter and his family live in Southern California.

Ingram Elliott Publishing

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Peter Berk

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