Sunday, March 15, 2015

Preview of "Shadow's Prisoners"


A
 cascade of death sweeps through a small town, and a quaint funeral home is at the center of the problem—but it’s not about the dead people there—it’s that some of them aren’t exactly dead. Fifteen-year-old Peter Livingston lives in the funeral home, but he doesn’t know about its gruesome connection to a maxium-security prison—some of the prison’s not-dead in-mates are not-alive either.
Shadow’s Prisoners is filled with hor-ror and cliff-hanger chapters and it’s a real page turner. In between the dis-gusting (rats) and the ugly (corpses) and the evil (plotters and schemers), there are also glimpses of warmth and humor that encourage the reader to stay hot on the trail with Peter, who armed only with a flashlight, searches through it everything and anything to solve the mystery. Who or what is killing so many animals and people in his town?
There’s the doctor who rides a motor-cycle through town to take care of his patients. There’s the teacher who is  a recycling fiend. There’s Peter’s father who is struggling to keep the old mortuary from becoming as dead as its clients. There’s Peter’s uncle who understands, more than anybody else, why it is necessary to brave the worst to discover the unnatural truth. And there’s the FBI agent who is forced to accept things way beyond his skill-set. And these are all the good folks.
Ultimately, this situation is for the birds—well actually a very special bird—who lives with Peter’s family and causes no end of havoc.

1 comment:

  1. Great teaser to describe the book! I started re reading from the beginning and I am still amazed and how much detail you describe and how you interwove the plot lines. I keep thinking where the heck did this all come from? Was he writing it in his head all those years I just thought he was commuting to Manhattan on the subways and buses? How did he know so much for the descriptions? Then I remember that you are a Virgo...explains a lot. And our mutual medical conditions contribute to something called hypergraphia. Dostoyevski had it. Makes you want to write and write and write...like I'm doing right now. Can you post this entire teaser on my Facebook page so I can share it with my 100 books in 100 days members? And when is the next book coming? Linda, your sister in law.

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