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Moments of Vulnerability
Posted by Literary-Titan

A Dangerous Man follows a grief-driven vigilante known as Ghost who targets traffickers and organized crime syndicates while the FBI tries to track him down and stop him. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?
Wow… it’s been such a long journey. At the original time of writing ADM (2016/17), the concept was nearly 16 years in the making or consideration. The inspiration came about from seeing what seemed like constant news cycles of child abuse, abductions, saved children from debaucherous circumstances. I was a young father at the time, and even though I worked in law enforcement as a corrections deputy then, I felt completely ignorant and helpless to do anything about these tragedies. There was no outlet. So, I returned to developing stories so that real justice could be dealt out to the kind of monsters that would do such horrendous things. Up until the time I finally started putting words to the page – there is actually a short story version that I’d written first – I was doing research. It’s the kind of topic that kicks open a door that I couldn’t close, much of which predicted and showed signs of evidence to the timely information the public as a whole are learning today.
Ghost is both terrifying and oddly compelling—how did you approach that balance?
I think what balances Ghost being both terrifying and compelling is that, despite his next level attributes, he’s got an emotional grounding to him, humanizing him, and making him relatable. It is easy to say that A Dangerous Man is a hyper-masculine novel, which is fair and true and purposeful. Beyond that, I also knew women eat up these stories, too. I wanted Ghost to be multi-layered from a singular perspective. Yes, he’s a father, but I wanted him relatable as a parent overall. I am deeply protective of the ones I love, especially my child, and I think Ghost transcends just being a father. With a lot of female readership, I think that aspect makes him relatable. I’ve heard so many times from women that they sometimes don’t like Ghost, but they absolutely love how he handles the consequences he imparts. This is further coupled with moments of vulnerability or openness – the memories that reveal he’s so much more than vengeance incarnate. Or that he used to be.
What questions about justice did you want readers to wrestle with rather than answer?
To be honest, I had no questions about justice in mind for the reader to wrestle with rather than answer. At least, not that I remember. I reveled in the ambiguous morality at the forefront of who my anti-hero was. I simply wanted to put it on full display for entertainment’s sake. Simultaneously, I knew it would be an injustice not to present the dichotomy of the circumstances viewed by the public. I know first-hand having worked in law enforcement that what I’m calling justice is not shared by all. There’s discourse to be had there. There are many clips of families forgiving murderers when the latter is being sentenced to life in prison for their crimes. It adds to the tension and suspense of the story, and my only aim was to properly serve the story and build further intrigue. Ghost’s accolades would not be universally received were they true and so publicly well known. There would be plenty of condemnation for his vigilante acts by diverse outlets. Similarly, there would also be plenty of praise and encouragement. I think at the present time, however, the latter option would become a great majority today with what people are learning.
When will Book Two be available? Can you give us an idea of where that book will take readers?
I do not have a specific date for the coming sequel of A Dangerous Man, but it is coming, and it will be in 2027. The untimely delay is due to an assortment of other projects already in motion, and mostly not wanting to continue working with the vanity/hybrid press under which ADM’s first edition was published. So, I forced myself to hold off, but I’ve had an immediate trilogy planned for a decade at this point. And once again, the revelations coming out in the world surrounding the topic of trafficking are timely to events in Ghost’s next foray, A Violent Man.
As for where the sequel will take readers… Well, there’s only one way to go. Deeper into the abyss.
Author Links: GoodReads | X (Twitter) | Facebook | Amazon
His crusade of retribution has freed countless trafficking victims from captivity, sweeping across the United States like a storm, and leaving a bloody path of destruction in his wake.
Who is he?
He was a father, a husband, and a former government operative who lost everything he cared for to a merciless Russian crime syndicate. And he’s arrived in Boston to bring his odyssey of vengeance to a close.
Can he be stopped?
Pursuing him is a relentless FBI agent with more at stake than enforcing the law, a hard-boiled detective suspicious of every piece of the puzzle, and a pair of cunning twin assassins who might rival his skill.
At what cost?
They’ll risk everything being drawn into the chaos of one man’s war for justice. Motives will be questioned, loyalties will be tested, and no one will come out unscathed – if at all.
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: A Dangerous Man, author, Vindicta Spectri Series, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, crime thriller, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, J.L. Engel, kindle, kobo, literature, noir crime, nook, novel, Organized Crime Thrillers, read, reader, reading, series, story, thriller, vigilante justice, writer, writing
Badge on Fire
Posted by Literary Titan

In Badge on Fire, we follow Jack, a Berkeley fire captain who is both a local hero and a deeply compromised man caught up with the Sangre cartel and a corrupt mayor, using “equipment donations” to Mexico as cover for arson jobs that clear the cartel. The book opens with a brutal villa fire on a cliff in Ensenada, then shifts back to Jack’s life at Station 5, his grief over his wife’s death, and his fragile relationship with his teenage daughter, all while he tries to keep his double life hidden from his tight-knit crew. In parallel, Mexican detective Sofía Valderón pieces together a pattern of fires linked to American fire units, eventually tracing them back to Jack and coming to Berkeley under cover as a journalist. The story builds toward a confrontation where Jack has to choose between protecting his daughter and his firehouse family, and finally facing the damage he has been helping to cause on both sides of the border.
The crime thriller frame is very clear, with cartel bosses, dirty politics, and an investigation that tightens like a noose, but what hooked me most was the everyday detail of station life and Jack’s small routines, like pancakes for his daughter or banter over terrible coffee at the firehouse table. Those pieces made the bigger twists land harder, because I never forgot that the guy doing these awful things is also the one who shows up when someone’s house is on fire. The cross-border angle feels textured rather than touristy, especially once we are in Sofía’s head and watching her sift through files, maps, and late-night hunches. Every time she connects another fire to one of those “goodwill” equipment trips, the book nudges that uncomfortable question of how easily good intentions can be bent for ugly purposes.
The prose is straightforward and visual, very much in line with a modern crime thriller, and the author has a good ear for how coworkers tease, comfort, and cover for each other in high-stress jobs. The fire scenes are vivid without being gore-heavy, and the quieter passages with Jack’s grief and guilt feel honest enough that I winced on his behalf. A few moments feel a little pointed, and some side characters come across more as embodiments of certain roles or ideas. There are also a couple of spots where you can see the plot doing its work, with key information arriving just when it’s needed to keep the investigation moving.
For a crime thriller, Badge on Fire spends a lot of time on moral gray zones, on what happens when a “protector” becomes a threat, and on how systems of corruption use ordinary people’s desire to help as cover. Jack’s inner conflict, especially around fatherhood and the badge he has turned into a weapon, gives the book a weight that will keep you thinking about this story afterwards. Sofía’s side of the story adds a needed counterbalance, grounding the consequences in the lives of those on the receiving end of the fires, not just the man starting them.
I would recommend this book to readers who enjoy character-driven crime thrillers set in realistic worlds, with firefighters, detectives, and cartel politics all colliding. If you like stories that mix action with emotional fallout, and you are willing to sit with a flawed protagonist who makes some very bad choices before reaching for any kind of redemption, Badge on Fire is worth your time. For anyone curious about the shadow side of heroism and the cost of looking away, this is a satisfying read.
Pages: 199 | ASIN : B0F2SZFBXP
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: action, Assassination thriller, author, Badge on Fire, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, Daniel Green, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, story, thriller, vigilante justice, writer, writing
A Dangerous Man
Posted by Literary Titan

A Dangerous Man by J.L. Engel is an action thriller with a pulp-noir edge, built around a roaming vigilante known as Ghost who has been leaving bodies behind in city after city, until his campaign slams into Boston in what the media dubs “The Boston Massacre.” The story fans out from there into a manhunt and a larger conspiracy: an FBI agent (Connor Stone) and a seasoned Boston detective get pulled into the wake of Ghost’s violence, while corruption inside law enforcement and organized crime tighten the net, including a commissioner implicated in trafficking. By the time the book points its flashlight past the street-level players, it’s hinting at an even bigger, shadowy figure in the international crime world, “Mr. X,” waiting beyond the last page like a locked door you know is going to open later.
I liked how Engel chose to start. Not with a cool-guy monologue or a slow build, but with a 9-1-1 call from a terrified missing child while gunfire cracks in the background. Then he follows it with a procedural, boots-on-the-ground sweep where SWAT walks into a slaughter and finds women and children packed into a cellar like discarded cargo. That choice sets the tone: this book wants you unsettled, and it wants you there. The writing is detailed and tactical, with a lot of attention to how law enforcement moves and reacts, and it keeps hopping across multiple points of view to keep pressure on the story.
The author doesn’t pretend the world here is tidy. Ghost is framed as both a warning and a weapon, and the book leans into the ugly truth that “justice” can feel satisfying even when it’s horrifying, like when the commissioner publicly refuses to back an arrest and resigns on the spot. At the same time, Engel keeps poking at what all this spectacle does to victims, and how the internet turns real suffering into an endless loop of commentary. The most grounding choice, for me, is that Ghost isn’t just a killing machine. He’s powered by grief, and the book lets you feel the soft, dangerous pull of memory when he sees a news anchor who reminds him of his wife, Veronica, and his focus nearly slips. That emotional thread doesn’t excuse what he does, but it does give the story a heartbeat under all the impact.
If you like gritty crime thrillers and high-velocity vigilante stories, this one will be a great read, especially if you’ve ever enjoyed the blunt momentum of Lee Child’s Jack Reacher books or the darker comic-book mood of The Punisher, and you don’t mind your thrillers looking straight at ugly subject matter. The book itself invites a “Taken” comparison in spirit and intensity, and that’s not a bad shorthand for the kind of ride it is. I’d recommend A Dangerous Man most to readers who want relentless action plus a conspiracy thread that keeps widening, and who can handle graphic violence and disturbing trafficking-related scenes without needing the narrative to soften the edges. If you want a hard, propulsive thriller that doesn’t flinch, it’s worth your time.
Pages: 454 | ASIN : B0G2HXRHZV
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: A Dangerous Man, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, crime, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, J.L. Engel, kidnapping thriller, kindle, kobo, literature, noir crime, nook, novel, Organized crime thriller, read, reader, reading, story, thriller, vigilante justice, writer, writing
Only Ann Knows
Posted by Literary Titan

Months after losing her only son in the Virginia Tech shooting, Ann Miller remains consumed by grief. The tragedy is made all the more jarring by her profession; she works for a gun rights organization. When she receives an AK-47 to deliver to her boss, the weapon inexplicably discharges, killing 13 people in a single, horrifying moment. Ann insists it was an accident. But was it? Or did the sorrow of losing her son drive her to a calculated act of violence?
In Only Ann Knows, Baird Smart crafts a riveting crime and mystery novel that unfolds with measured intensity. The courtroom drama echoes the legal tension of John Grisham’s best work, yet Smart’s voice remains distinct. The narrative hinges on a single, devastating question: Did Ann pull the trigger on purpose?
What elevates this novel is its commitment to character. Ann is an enigma, vulnerable, composed, inscrutable. Smart reveals just enough of her inner life to make her real, while withholding enough to keep her mysterious. She is, in every way, the novel’s anchor.
Smart manipulates reader expectation with impressive precision. Just when you think you understand Ann’s motives, new details shift your perspective. This is not a story that offers easy answers.
Equally compelling are the two FBI agents assigned to the case, distinct in temperament and method, yet both indispensable to the investigation. Their dynamic adds further layers to a narrative already thick with ambiguity and moral complexity.
Timely in theme and meticulous in execution, Only Ann Knows is a masterclass in suspense. Few novels manage to maintain this level of tension without veering into melodrama. Fewer still offer a conclusion that feels both shocking and entirely earned. Smart delivers both.
Only Ann Knows is a gripping, immersive thriller that doesn’t let go. A standout in the genre, thought-provoking, emotionally charged, and impossible to predict.
Pages: 371 | ASIN : B0D8R9LRB2
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, Baird Smart, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, crime murder, detective mysteries, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, murder thriller, nook, novel, Only Ann Knows, read, reader, reading, story, thriller, traditional detective, vigilante justice, writer, writing
Serves You Right
Posted by Literary Titan

Orion Gregory’s Serves You Right is a dark, twisty, and deeply satisfying crime thriller centered around Sydney Livingstone, a former tennis pro turned police detective, who finds herself pulled into the aftermath of a botched murder trial, a vigilante justice campaign, and a rapidly escalating series of brutal revenge killings. At the heart of the story is the acquitted-but-clearly-guilty Frank McBride, whose smug escape from justice sets off a chain of events that rattles an entire community and sends Syd on a collision course with both a killer and her own professional limits.
Right out of the gate, I have to say the writing is gripping. Gregory wastes no time dropping readers into the chaos with a gut-punch opening that doesn’t flinch from violence or moral ambiguity. He’s got a sharp instinct for pacing. Chapters fly by, and even when things quiet down, there’s always an undercurrent of tension pulling you forward. The prose isn’t flashy, but it’s effective. I liked that. There’s no pretension. Gregory writes like he’s trying to entertain, not impress. That said, the structure can get a bit dense at times, especially when the book shifts perspectives rapidly. Still, the characters, particularly Syd, are fully realized, flawed, and human. I rooted for her hard, even when she stumbled.
I was pleasantly surprised by the book’s moral weight. This isn’t your tidy detective story with good guys and bad guys in their corners. Gregory plays in the gray, and he plays dirty. The vigilante plotline, spearheaded by a mysterious online persona known only as “The Enforcer,” hit a nerve. There’s a kind of catharsis in seeing monsters get what’s coming to them, but Gregory doesn’t let us off that easily. He asks real questions about justice, about power, about how far is too far. And while he doesn’t hand us answers, he sure knows how to make us squirm while we look for them.
I’d recommend Serves You Right to fans of gritty police procedurals, psychological thrillers, and morally tangled crime fiction. If you like your stories messy, raw, and a little uncomfortable in the best possible way, then you’ll tear through this one like I did. Gregory doesn’t serve justice on a silver platter. He drops it on your doorstep, blood-spattered and blinking.
Pages: 327 | ASIN : B0FD1ZZCCQ
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: action, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, crime, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, Orion Gregory, read, reader, reading, serial killer, Serves You Right, story, suspense, thriller, vigilante justice, writer, writing
TORRENT
Posted by Literary Titan

Torrent by Anthony B. Gray is an emotionally charged psychological thriller that begins with a brutal tragedy and dives headfirst into grief, guilt, and the chaos that follows. The story centers on Samuel, a high-powered Atlanta attorney whose carefully ordered life unravels when his wife, Monica, dies by suicide following years of emotional neglect and shared trauma. The narrative takes us from opulent law offices to the hauntingly beautiful and treacherous wilderness of Canyon Park, where Samuel embarks on a trip meant to honor Monica’s memory and ends up confronting his own inner demons, dangerous strangers, and possibly something far darker than grief.
Gray’s writing is bold and unflinching. The opening chapters hit like a hammer. They’re vivid, tragic, full of jagged edges. He paints Samuel with a kind of clinical coldness, showing a man addicted to control and blind to emotion. And yet, as the story unfolds, there’s an unexpected tenderness beneath the grief. Gray doesn’t shy away from uncomfortable truths: the way ambition can slowly rot relationships, how denial makes us complicit, and how even the most successful lives can be hollowed out by loneliness. The pacing is tight, with bursts of poetic introspection giving way to a fast-moving, character-driven plot. I was impressed by how Gray weaves Monica’s presence through the whole book. She’s gone, but never really absent.
There were moments when the dialogue leaned into melodrama. Some scenes felt like they were pulled from a pulpy noir film more than a grounded psychological tale. Still, that unevenness didn’t dull the emotional impact. In fact, I think it gave the story a strange rhythm. Moments of emotional realism snapped against bursts of surreal tension. The latter half of the book turns almost horror-like, not with ghosts or monsters, but with the monsters we carry and the secrets we bury. It’s weird, gripping, and sometimes hard to read, but I couldn’t look away.
If you’ve ever wrestled with guilt, if you’ve loved someone too late, or if you just like your thrillers with a side of soul-searching, Torrent is worth your time. It starts with heartbreak and ends somewhere darker, but also, strangely, with a kind of redemption. I’d recommend it for readers who appreciate layered characters, emotional messiness, and stories that don’t tidy themselves up for comfort.
Pages: 149 | ASIN : B0DRJ8LSHC
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: Anthony B. Gray, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, crime, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kidnapping, kindle, kobo, literature, nook, novel, read, reader, reading, spense, story, thriller, TORRENT, vigilante justice, writer, writing
Sua Sponte: The Minneapolis ADOZ
Posted by Literary Titan

Mikael Carlson’s Sua Sponte: The Minneapolis ADOZ is a high-octane political-military thriller that blends the grit of combat realism with the chaos of civic unrest. Set in the aftermath of a brutal ambush in Syria, the story follows Staff Sergeant Emmit “Chicago” Haskins as he reintegrates into civilian life, only to find himself caught in the spiraling tensions of post-Floyd Minneapolis. The novel weaves together threads of political intrigue, media manipulation, grassroots activism, and the enduring loyalty of a brotherhood forged in war. It’s fast-paced, cinematic, and unapologetically opinionated.
What struck me first was how Carlson plunges you into battle from page one. The prologue doesn’t ease you in; it throws you into a searing ambush near Al-Tanf, Syria. The action is visceral. The description of RPGs ripping through MRAPs and Emmit refusing to abandon his wounded Rangers was raw, heroic, and honestly had me holding my breath. Carlson writes combat like he’s lived it. The whole opening sequence could easily rival any war movie for sheer intensity. I loved that it wasn’t just about firepower. It was about values. Loyalty. Brotherhood. Carlson knows what makes soldiers tick.
The narrative then shifts sharply to Minneapolis, where the tone grows considerably more serious. The city’s social fabric is fraying, and Carlson addresses these tensions with striking candor. The character of Police Chief Vanessa Campbell is placed in a particularly precarious position, as she navigates the volatile intersections of political pressure, internal departmental conflict, and a mayor whose priorities appear driven more by public image than justice. In a particularly jarring scene, the mayor demands the immediate termination of an officer who deployed a taser on a knife-wielding suspect, well before any investigation is completed. His curt command, “Fire him. Today,” delivered while he examines his fingernails, underscores the indifference to due process. The moment is deeply unsettling. It illustrates a system more concerned with optics than with truth, and it’s difficult not to sympathize with Vanessa, who is forced to balance integrity with job security. The tension feels uncomfortably authentic.
The narrative also delves deeply into the interplay between media and activism, presenting a nuanced examination of their power and volatility. Kai, an independent journalist, emerges as one of the novel’s most compelling figures. Intelligent, jaded, and visibly fatigued by the ongoing culture wars, he nevertheless remains committed to uncovering the truth. His analysis of the gathering at Gold Medal Park deliberating whether it constitutes a peaceful protest or the beginning of something more volatile is astute. His observation, “This somehow feels…organized,” resonates strongly, and Carlson’s willingness to confront the ways in which grassroots movements can be manipulated is both bold and unsettling. Landon, the charismatic agitator, delivers speeches that are disturbingly persuasive. When he declares, “Let’s take this protest to the steps of City Hall…or burn it down,” the moment lands with alarming intensity. It captures the razor’s edge between civic expression and orchestrated unrest, and Carlson handles it with disturbing authenticity.
What kept me reading, though, was the emotional heart of the story. Emmit, trying to find a purpose post-military, is such a solid anchor. His conversations with his sister Kenyala were unexpectedly touching and even funny. She’s tough, witty, and won’t let him wallow. Their back-and-forth gave the book some much-needed softness. It’s easy for stories like this to get lost in the adrenaline and outrage, but Carlson brings it back to the human level just enough to keep you invested in more than the politics.
Sua Sponte: The Minneapolis ADOZ is well-suited for readers who appreciate political thrillers that are unapologetically direct and thematically provocative. The novel confronts its subject matter without hesitation, offering a narrative that some may view as politically charged, while others may interpret it as daring and uncompromising. The story delivers a gripping and unflinching exploration of the challenges veterans face both abroad and upon returning home. For those drawn to narratives where the battlefield extends into civilian life, this book is a compelling and thought-provoking read.
Pages: 444 | ASIN : B0F6RMBYG7
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Posted in Book Reviews, Five Stars
Tags: author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, Mikael Carlson, military thriller, nook, novel, political thriller, read, reader, reading, story, Sua Sponte: The Minneapolis ADOZ, Terrorism Thrillers, vigilante justice, writer, writing
Fun-Loving, Intelligent Women
Posted by Literary-Titan

The Sole Sisters follows a retired defense attorney who teams up with a quirky group of women to investigate her husband’s murder. Where did the idea for this novel come from?
For the past 10 years, I have been co-leader of The Villages True Crime Book Club. Our community is sometimes called ‘A drinking community with a golfing problem’. We have over 100 members, 70% of whom are women. Our group of women resembles Noah’s Ark; we have one of everything. I took bits and pieces of the members and developed a group of fun-loving, intelligent women, all interested in solving cold cases. Thus began The Sole Sisters.
While living in Washington, D.C., the Beltway Sniper Murders took place. Eleven died as a result. A female FBI officer was shot and killed at a location I had just left. It was an easy step to have the defense attorney husband of The Sole Sisters leader shot by a mysterious sniper. Once the local law enforcement gave up the investigation, the Sole Sisters became the force driving the investigation. The crime taking place in a fictional upscale retirement community known as ‘The Hamlets’ allowed me to tie into many of the real and imagined goings-on of my own community, The Villages, FL. The Sole Sisters, who firmly believe they do not have to follow all those ‘silly rules’ imposed upon law enforcement, begin to identify small pieces of evidence that continue to grow in size.
Which character in the novel do you feel you relate to more and why?
With this being the first of a series. I had a special relationship with each character as they entered the story. A crazy psychiatrist who did his residency at a fertility clinic (who picked up walking around money by being a sperm donor), and his knockout gorgeous fiancée-attorney, provide many opportunities for me to relate to. Of course, Kate, the group leader, is a strong, dominant character. Her husband was shot, and they are going to identify the shooter, even after local law enforcement had given up all hope.
While I can relate to all of them, I suppose my favorite is Linda, who is introduced as the dark angel of death; she ends up being a guardian angel. Who cannot love a beautiful lingerie model/designer, who owns her own very successful business, and has a side job as a professional hitwoman?
How did the mystery develop for this story? Did you plan it before writing, or did it develop organically?
I’m a planner when it comes to writing; almost everything I do is thought about prior to it happening. Many of the true crime cases our book club was reading at the time involved DNA. That allowed using DNA as key evidence. This allowed me to explore how it could be used and misused. It allowed adversaries of a suspect to wrongfully accuse and prosecute that suspect. Then the surprise ending proves that DNA is not always unique.
What is the next book that you are working on, and when will it be available?
The Sole Sisters celebrate their first case success and begin looking for another. The Sole Sisters Case #2, The Hydra begins with a local high school girl’s disappearance. Her kidnapping leads to a local sex trafficking ring. What began as a local case soon goes national and then international. As usual, the Sole Sisters’ rather unorthodox methods allow them to discover items overlooked by local, national, and international law enforcement. This book is currently available on Amazon.com.
Available on Amazon.com late summer 2025 is the third in a series, The Sole Sisters, Case #3: The Crape Myrtle Murders. When naked female and male bodies are discovered at the entrance of Pelican Country Club, law enforcement is stymied. There is no way they can be identified. Just when the community begins to calm down, another two bodies are found at the Bandstand across from City Hall. No fingerprint matches, no DNA matches, no Missing Persons Reports, it’s almost as if they never existed.
Author Links: GoodReads | Facebook | LinkedIn | Reddit | Amazon
Can’t tell you much more without giving away clues, I know you will enjoy THE SOLE SISTERS..
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Posted in Interviews
Tags: 2, 3, author, book, book recommendations, book review, Book Reviews, book shelf, bookblogger, books, books to read, ebook, fiction, goodreads, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, mystery, nook, novel, R. E. Markland II, read, reader, reading, serial killers, series, story, The Sole Sisters, thriller, vigilante justice, Vigilante Justice Thrillers, writer, writing










