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Flash Flood Warning Ex-musician and current radio news director Charlie Callahan discovers his search for six missing months from his life leads straight to a hotbed of Fourth Reich Nazis in Paraguay, and takes him on a bloody trail of murder and treachery from Las Vegas to Vancouver, Asuncion to Boston.
"His chapter transitions have made me miss a lot of sleep over the years." Shalanna Collins, associate editor of FUTURES magazine and longtime fan.
Lucinda The death of a young Las Vegas dancer, daughter of the Deputy Director of the CIA, brings together the man who loved her, agent Diane Wells (from Flash Flood Warning) and a seedy retired CIA operative on a frustrating quest to find Lucinda's killer.
"A devastating look at the seamy underside of the Las Vegas casino world." Tom Stuart, retired CIA agent.
(scheduled for 2001 release by Xlibris)
Legally Dead A Las Vegas lawyer's day gets off to a bad start when her client and a judge are shot to death at a sentencing hearing...and things like an upcoming election and the unearthing of a sex ring among the city's power brokers do little to make things easier.
"This will probably be your biggest seller, but please wait until I'm out of the business." The author's ex-wife, a Las Vegas attorney who has now retired.
(scheduled for 2002 release by Xlibris)
Autopsy on a Living Corpse When Jimmy Polk's first novel becomes a runaway best-seller, he finds himself reunited with the three most important loves of his life--and being pursued by a cadre of drug-dealing Nazis who want what they believe is his unnatural power to see the future.
"You made a believer out of me with this one, Havens." The late George Willard, author of The Horseman and one of the most colorful guests in the history of the Jerry Springer Show.
(Available now from Xlibris)
Without a Prayer When an 87-year-old man is murdered in a quiet Michigan lakeshore town, it's just the beginning of slaughter among the aged, and its roots go back to the theft of $2 million in Mob money from the local bank.
"One is never quite sure who the victims and the villains are until the last few pages, and the contrast between the peaceful small-town background and the hidden violence that permeates the place . The characters make you believe you know them, maybe even grew up with them. It's as if Thomas Gifford and Agatha Christie had collaborated." Don Freidkin, newspaper and TV journalist and critic.
(Available now from Xlibris.)
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