I try to stay from the hard sell, especially in this blog.
My philosophy is that I want people to get to know me and my writing a little
and they can decide to buy the book or not. Most muster the courage to read
this free blog and skip paying for a book and that’s okay. No one has time to
read everything. Even I can’t keep up with all the books I want to read. Hell,
I can’t even keep up with all the books I want to read that are written by
personal friends. So I’m not going to fault anyone for reading the blog and not
buying the book, though I obviously wish you would. (Editor’s Note: Calling
bullshit. Good taste forbids me from repeating what he says about those
skinflint anti-intellectual MAGA-heads who read the blog for free and don’t buy
any books. That’s him, though. He’s like that. I try and I try…)
That said, Ten-Seven
drops one week from today, so the next week or so are going to be dedicated to
flogging the book. I’ll try to do it in the most polite and non-intrusive way I
can, but this is my Fortnight of Blatant Self-Promotion (FBSP to those in the
know) and I need to grab what attention I can.
Here’s the tease for Ten-Seven:
Vicki Leydig thought
she was going to have a few drinks with her friend Mary and maybe get to spend
a little time with Doug Strinweiss at the Allegheny Casino. She didn’t expect
Doug to offer her a ride home, and she sure didn’t expect to watch a stranger
blow Doug’s head off in the parking lot. Penns River police don’t have much to
go on until Detective Ben “Doc” Dougherty interviews casino employees and
learns of drug deals going down in and around the property. Leads show promise
and fall apart with depressing frequency until the local prosecutor turns a
minor charge into a statement that leads Doc and the rest of the police force
to a surprising conclusion, though not before tragedy strikes one of their own.
This isn’t the only
thing Penns River has on its plate. A consent decree signed with the federal
government has brought three new female officers to the force, and Deputy Chief
Jack Harriger continues his push to take over the top job from Stush
Napierkowski. Doc learns his young friend Wilver Faison may be a key player in
the local drug trade and one Penns River cop has a secret he’d just as soon
keep to himself.
Meanwhile, Pittsburgh
mob boss Mike Mannarino faces increasing pressure from his bosses in New York,
so much so he’s thinking of reaching out to Chicago for protection. What the
rest of his crew has to decide is whether Chicago is the only other
organization Mike might make an arrangement with.
It’s another week in
the town of Penns River, with distractions that range from petty vandalism to a
bridge jumper keeping the cops’ full attention away from the critical task at
hand.
I also teased a couple of excerpts in previous blog posts.
In Chapter
20 Doc interviews casino employees in the hope someone saw something
he can use.
In Chapter
6 a lawyer shows up at the station to represent the prime suspect.
Piqued your interest? You can pre-order Ten-Seven from Down & Out
Books; it’s also available at these fine retailers.
• Amazon — Trade Paperback | eBook
• Amazon UK — Trade Paperback | eBook
• Barnes & Noble — Trade Paperback | eBook
• IndieBound — Trade Paperback
• iTunes — eBook
• Kobo — eBook
• Play — eBook
• Amazon UK — Trade Paperback | eBook
• Barnes & Noble — Trade Paperback | eBook
• IndieBound — Trade Paperback
• iTunes — eBook
• Kobo — eBook
• Play — eBook
This fine piece of American entertainment is available in
both trade paperback and e-book formats.
Not to get all Bartles and Jaymes about it, but thank you
for your support.
2 comments:
You are amazing!
If I can do anything to help, let me know. Would be glad to post a synopsis or interview on my blog. Don;t know if it helps.
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