Lost Summer Review

Lost Summer
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Divorcee Kathryn informs her sixteen years old daughter Caitlin that they will spend the summer on Danbroke Island on the North Carolina Outer Banks because she feels her two children are out of control. Caitlin is outraged as she planned to sing backup with her boyfriend's band while her eleven years old brother Luke accepts a four wheel bribe from his wealthy mother.
After traveling from La Jolla, California the three Rosses reach their destination, the Pirates Lodge, owned by Bill Collins, Kathryn's high school boyfriend. Her two children realize they are across the country because their prescription crazed mother was hoping to renew an old fling. The teen makes friends with an out of place Goth Danielle, but as a hurricane approaches she fears Bill, who always leers at her when he is not "accidentally" touching her. She has no one to turn to as her mom hides behind her drug stupor, her brother continues to be the same lunatic he was on the west coast, and her dad abandoned the family last year.
LOST SUMMER is an interesting family drama starring a beleaguered female teen with no place to turn to except to a degree another isolated peer as Bill increasingly tries to take unwanted liberties with her while her mom pretends all is well. Kathryn and Luke are purposely made extreme out of control stereotypes so that their hedonistic destructive behavior negatively impacts Caitlin especially during the isolated LOST SUMMER.
Harriet Klausner


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Mission of Malice Review

Mission of Malice
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I just finished reading this book. I couldn't put it down. This is a real page turner. It was difficult for me to quit reading and go to bed, I always wanted to see what happened next. I enjoyed all the suspense. I hope there will be more by this author.

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Mission of Malice by Renee Wetherill is a timely tale of suspense, terrorism, and intrigue set against the dangerous Arizona/Mexican border.When Steen McCabe, a young border patrol agent and covert CIA agent, captures an Egyptian terrorist, crossing our border, he decides to assume the terrorist's identity to find out what he was plotting, McCabe is soon in a lab with other terrorists, helping them make a dirty bomb.Driving an 18-wheeler, he travels with the other terrorists across the contry.His job is to deliver the bomb to Washington D.C. Hot on their trail, the FBI races against time to catch and stop them, but danger lurks even in the White House.Beautifully written and filled with plot twists and turns, Mission of Malice offers a story that seems ripped from today's headlines.

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L.L. Bean Family Camping Handbook (L. L. Bean) Review

L.L. Bean Family Camping Handbook (L. L. Bean)
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even though i have been camping every summer, all my life, this book is very nice with good tips. some list on what is needed and what you can leave behind ( i always pack too much). good ideas for camping with kids. some basic safety tips on lightning, first aid, snake bite, etc. good tips on what type of equipment is out there. i was surprised that there wasn't a big push to buy l.l. bean equipment. it was a very well rounded book.

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An invaluable guide for active parents, covering all the basics for a lifetime of exciting, safe camping experiences with children.

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Going Through Ghosts (WEST WORD FICTION) Review

Going Through Ghosts (WEST WORD FICTION)
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A cocktail waitress at 54, Maggie Foltz works at the Crystal Casino in Creosote. That's where she meets Sarah, a member of the Willow tribe of Bone Lake. An unlikely friendship begins which makes Sarah's murder all the more jarring for Maggie. Then with the help of Minnie Siyala, a Willow band healer, the spirit of Sarah guides Maggie to Bone Lake and an ultimate resolution. "Going Through Ghosts" is a deftly written page-turner of a novel with author Mary Sojourner bringing even her peripheral and supporting characters to life in the mind's eye of the reader. Of special note is Sojourner's inclusion of Native American elements into her riveting story making "Going Through Ghosts" a strongly endorsed addition to community library contemporary fiction collections and personal reading lists.


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Stable Smarts: Sensible Advice, Quick Fixes, and Time-tested Wisdom from an Idaho Horsewoman Review

Stable Smarts: Sensible Advice, Quick Fixes, and Time-tested Wisdom from an Idaho Horsewoman
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Heather Smith Thomas's Stable Smarts: Sensible Advice, Quick Fixes, And Time-Tested Wisdom From An Idaho Horsewoman (1580176100, $18.95) comes from a woman who raises horses and cattle in Idaho and goes far beyond your usual horse management book. Here are hints on how to tell and purchase the best quality hay, making a makeshift hackamore, preparing homemade pest repellents, and fixing fences and more. Virtually all the equipment associated with a horse and ranch, from trailers to leads and bedding, are revealed in a book packed with practical tips and insights.

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Old cowboy tricks, quick fixes, hardlearned lessons, and tried-and-true horsekeeping wisdom fill the pages of this indispensable handbook from seasoned horsewoman Heather Smith Thomas. Writing from her Idaho ranch, and drawing from a lifetime of working with horses, Thomas has assembled a treasure-trove of information for anyone who rides, keeps, or dreams of spending time with horses. Presented in appealing bite-sized portions, Thomas's insider tips cover everything from barns and tack to feeding, foaling, medical care, trail riding, camping, knot-tying, fencing, trailering, and more. She addresses every aspect of horse care and handling that average horseowners will encounter, regardless of where they live, what breeds they have, and what style of riding or work they do with their horses. Resourceful, knowledgeable, and intuitive about horses, Heather Smith Thomas is someone every horse enthusiast would love to ride alongside for a spell. With Stable Smarts, they can do just that, as often as they'd like.

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German V-Weapon Sites 1943-45 (Fortress) Review

German V-Weapon Sites 1943-45 (Fortress)
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An Osprey Fortress series volume on German V-Weapon sites may not seem that gripping to many readers, who prefer to read about the actual V-1 and V-2 rockets, but this volume offers a great deal. As usual, you cannot pick up a volume written by Steven J Zaloga without reading something new and insightful that you haven't seen before in other books, so this volume starts with that advantage. Further, this volume is not just about "sites," but about the cat-and-mouse game between the Germans to establish their V-weapon launching sites and the Allied efforts to detect and destroy them. Hitler was intent upon using the V-weapons (Revenge weapons) to retaliate against Allied civilians, which became more vital to him as Germany's fortunes on the battlefield waned. Nor is this merely a nostalgic look at obsolete weapons; as Zaloga makes clear, the whole issue of countering fixed and mobile missiles was revisited again during the "Great Scud Hunt" during Desert Storm in 1991. In an era when a number of countries are deploying mobile tactical missiles, this subject remains a vital national security concern and Steven Zaloga's volume is a perfect starting point to understanding the dynamics of this type of weapons system from both sides of the hill.
The volume begins with an overview of the German V-Weapons programs (the V-1 and V-2 were covered in earlier New Vanguard titles by Zaloga), which includes the HDP pump gun and the Rheinbote rocket, as well as the V-1 and V-2. Initially, the German preference was to build large, well-protected fixed launching sites in France near the Channel Coast. However, these sites were relatively easy for the Allies to detect and Zaloga details the devastating RAF attacks against these sites with Tallboy bombs. Zaloga also makes the interesting point that the shortage of liquid oxygen for the missiles severely limited Germany's V-weapons launch rates even without any Allied interference. After the initial fixed sites were disrupted by Allied bombing, the Germans tried a new pattern of fixed sites that were less conspicuous and better protected, but most of these were bombed as well. As the author notes, the Germans had to make the choice between using large, fixed sites that could sustain a fairly respectable launch rate or opt for mobile launch sites that offered better survivability but poor launch rates. Essentially, the effectiveness of the Allied bombing effort drove the Germans to embrace the mobile basing concept. Mobile V-weapon sites proved to be far more difficult to detect but the initial missile barrages against London were much smaller than intended, due to the limitations of this method. Eventually, the Germans also introduced air-launched V-1s from bombers, but the author notes that this delivery method afforded a 50-mile CEP and a very high failure rate. Ultimately, the author says the V-weapons campaign was a massive flop - costing Germany three times as much as the Manhattan Project - in no small measure due to the ineffective launching methods forced upon the Germans by Allied counter-responses.
The photos in this volume are terrific, particularly color photos of the restored V-1s on launch ramps in the UK and Belgium. The color plates are also superb, showing all the various types of heavy launch sites, V-1s on ramps, a V-2 mobile launch site (really terrific) and the HDP gun site. The author also provides a very useful bibliography. One aspect of the volume that I particularly enjoyed was the space devoted to the HDP gun and how it was used to bombard Luxemburg City - this was one V-weapon that you don't hear about much but the author provides several great photos of it. He also notes that the Iraqi attempt to build a `supergun' was based upon the HDP concept and just as much a failure. This is a book not only to read and enjoy now, but to keep on the shelf of military professionals as a reference for the next time that some lunatic threatens to shower missiles upon a civilian population.


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Designed to change the course of the war, the V-weapons required ambitious plans to defend their expensive and complicated launch sites. Steven J Zaloga describes the configuration and planned deployment of heavy missile sites, as well as the unique Allied tactics developed to counter this threat, including a remote-control version of the B-17 bomber. Covering the V-1 ski sites, the mobile units employed for V-2 launches and other secret weapons bases like the "V-3" high-pressure gun at Mimoyeques, he reviews the impact of these weapon systems and defenses not only on World War II but also on the development of modern weaponry. This book is an excellent guide to the sites described, many of which still survive and are visited on battlefield tours.

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Black Rabbit Summer Review

Black Rabbit Summer
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I came to discover this book in a truly bizarre way - I won a pre-release proof copy in a gift basket of books at a raffle. I have no idea where it came from. I will also state up-front that I am over 40 years old, and not your typical demographic for this book. While I found this book to be a very easy read, it was also incredibly suspenseful and I enjoyed it tremendously. I read it over the course of a few days rather than my typical "few weeks". The characterizations are very well done; even though there is very little descriptive prose (and TONS of dialog) you get a very good internal image of these young people. I agree with most of what the previous reviewer wrote, with a couple of exceptions: 1) The dialog is a little too realistic - characters say "What?" at least a hundred times in this book, only to have the previous line of dialog re-stated. It feels realistic, and helps drive home some points, but it is overused and becomes agonizingly tedious (unless it was changed after the pre-release copy) and 2) while it is not glamorized, these kids get drunk, smoke dope, take drugs, have sex, lie, commit strong acts of violence, and get themselves in way over their head. The "F" word is used about 100 times. A mature reader might understand the lessons found between the lines, but I'm afraid other, less mature readers, might see all these recognizable characters doing unacceptable things and somehow legitimize their behavior. None of these characters have any redeeming values, other than the friedship and loyalty between two of them, nor should any of them serve as role models. Maybe I'm an overly protective parent, but I strongly disagree with rating of "12 and older" in my advance copy. A 12 year old will have nightmares for a week. Maybe a mature 15 or 16. This is Stephen King type stuff, toned down only a *little* bit.
Despite these warnings, Black Rabbit Summer really was a wonderful surprise, and a very good story. I'd give it 4.5 stars if I could.


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Moon Washington Fishing: The Complete Guide to Lakes, Streams, and Saltwater (Moon Handbooks) Review

Moon Washington Fishing: The Complete Guide to Lakes, Streams, and Saltwater (Moon Handbooks)
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This fishing guide is good. It provides a lot of details needed to fish fresh and saltwater. No guidebook can cover every body of water in equally great detail. But Rudnick covers the basics well for just about all the waters I fish.
I use the book frequently to plan trips. It's been accurate so far. Some of the best ideas in my book, "How to catch salmon, sturgeon, lingcod, rockfish, & halibut along the pacific coast," came from Terry's contributions. I recommend his book.


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Washington native and expert angler Terry Rudnick knows the best fishing spots in the Evergreen State, from the marine waters of the San Juan Islands, just a short trip from Seattle, to the remote lakes of North-eastern Washington. "Moon Washington Fishing" leads both beginner and expert anglers to the best lakes, reservoirs, rivers, and coasts that the state has to offer. The sixth edition of this definitive guidebook includes detailed descriptions of over 600 fishing locations and 70 pages of fishing tips and advice.Complete with detailed regional maps and directions for each location, "Moon Washington Fishing" provides anglers with first-rate expert advice and all the necessary tools to head outdoors.Devoted campers, hikers, boaters, anglers, and bikers agree: "Moon Outdoors" authors know their stuff. They're recreation gurus who have hiked the trails, fished the rivers, and pitched their tents to provide readers with authoritative information and first-hand experiences. From coast to coast, "Moon Outdoors" has the U.S. covered.

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Writing Music for Television and Radio Commercials (and more): A Manual for Composers and Students Review

Writing Music for Television and Radio Commercials (and more): A Manual for Composers and Students
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Composers and students and collections catering to them will love Writing Music for Television and Radio Commercials (And More), a detailed manual appearing in its second edition to describe the process of composing and arranging commercials for two different media, TV and radio. This new, expanded edition provides a review of the commercial music business and surveys composition, arranging, and instruction for composing for the commercial market.


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Peculiar, MO Review

Peculiar, MO
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Question: How does an extraterrestrial civilization survive the impending destruction of its home planet?
Answer: Embed your species' DNA in meteors and send them flying throughout the galaxy in hopes that eventually one of the meteors will impact on a planet that is suitable for regeneration of the species.
That's the scenario for Robert Williams' first rate science fiction novel "Peculiar, MO." The story reminded me a bit of a cross between "Andromeda Strain" and "Invasion of the Body Snatchers," but in fact it's neither. In "Andromeda Strain," the action takes place primarily at a remote laboratory where scientists study the alien organism that has infected and killed most of a small town's population. In "Peculiar, MO," the action is in the town itself and centers around the organism's effects on the local people and a biological terrorism military unit that is studying the alien organism and trying to limit its spread. The tension grows steadily as the unit's scientist comes to the terrifying realization that the organism is attempting to invade the earth, not just infect it.
The author's scientific explanation of the mechanism by which the alien plasmids (short strands of DNA) could use earth's plants and animals, including humans, to regenerate the alien species and rebuild its group consciousness and memory is quite detailed. I don't remotely have enough science background to know how plausible this is, but it was a fascinating concept that was more credible than the typical aliens-invade-human-bodies stories. I'll give the author a lot of credit for originality.

The author builds the story around several characters. The principal characters, including Kelly Ross, Spencer Dale, and the mysterious John Gordon, are likable, well developed three-dimensional characters. There are some bad guys too, and the author kills them off in some very satisfying (i.e., gruesome) ways.

As another reviewer noted, the military unit involved in the story was very small and was led by a non-commissioned officer, with privates doing most of the work. This wasn't very realistic, since the government had already dealt with a previous meteor strike that contained the alien plasmids, so the potential danger was recognized. I'm guessing that the author's reasoning was that a larger unit, such as a battalion, would have brought too much attention from the local people. In any case, this is a fairly minor quibble.
Having read other stories by Robert Williams, I expected the writing to be of professional quality, and it was. The story flowed smoothly from scene to scene, and the characters' dialog was realistic. The story grabbed me from the beginning, and the action is pretty much nonstop, ending in an extremely tense and violent climax. Blended smoothly into the action is the relationship between Kelly and Spencer and the blossoming romance that brings them closer together.
Editing was generally good, but there were a number of typos in my Kindle version. There weren't enough mistakes to affect my enjoyment of the book, but the author should have proofread his final manuscript more closely.
No spoilers here, but after reading "Peculiar, MO," I don't know if I'll ever turn my back on a cat again!
The bottom line: This is a first rate page-turner for science fiction and techno-thriller fans. It's certainly one of the most original and intelligently written alien invasion stories I've read.


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Welcome to Peculiar, MO. For most, life is good in this idyllic Midwestern town, until a falling star brings an unearthly menace. Soon animals are found dying of a mysterious disease. At night, beasts begin to cry out in voices that sound almost like words, as they are drawn to a burned clearing to serve an alien will.
Local widow Kelly Ross, who is struggling to make ends meet after the death of her husband, sends her young son into the forest on an errand, where he makes a frightening discovery.
Spencer Dale, the town's mechanic, whose past contains a painful secret, begins to experience strange dreams and visions, as he relives memories that are not his own.
Nine-year-old Rachel, a child of nature, becomes linked to an unspeakable crime that took place more than eighty years in the past, while a military operation moving inexorably towards the meteor's impact site makes its presence, and its plans, known.
All of their lives are linked together, and their courage and faith are tested, as they are drawn to the site where the star fell to Earth and an alien life cycle reaches its terrifying climax.


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International Heavy Trucks of the 1960s (At Work) Review

International Heavy Trucks of the 1960s (At Work)
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Slightly disappointed that it was only photos. Would have preferred some written background information on the vehicle build components.

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The success of International's 1950s semi-trucks continued into the 1960s. Many series were carried over from the 1950s, but International now offered more models in each series to make them more versatile. The pictures you see in this book mainly cover the bigger straight trucks and over-the-road and off-highway trucks; the popular trucks like the V series, R series, D-400, DCO-400, CO-4000, and the line of "stars," to mention a few. As you look at them, enjoy and admire them, as many are long gone.

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Stairs of Sand Review

Stairs of Sand
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I loved this book. I read it in one sitting and just couldn't wait to see how the story turned out. The care and love Eileen poured into her characters makes them jump off the page. I felt like I knew each and every one of the characters like friends. She tackles difficult territory: drug use, job loss, sexuality, death and the always tenuous and fractious mother-daughter dynamic with aplomb. A great read.

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"Stairs of Sand" is the story of a young woman, diagnosed with borderline personality disorder.She seeks to live her life to the fullest. To live, she must find a way through a labyrinth of family secrets, including the one that creates self-destructive rage in her.

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Devil's Knot: The True Story of the West Memphis Three Review

Devil's Knot: The True Story of the West Memphis Three
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I'm fascinated by the West Memphis Three case, but the advocacy nature of so much of the available information (the documentaries, the wm3.org website) has always left me with the feeling I'm not getting the whole story. The main figures in the West Memphis and Arkansas justice system have long said that the movies and website skirt the true facts, and if those facts were known people would understand that the guilty parties are in prison. Leveritt wisely took this assertion as the premise of her book--she decided to put it to the test. She has done a brilliant, dispassionate job of it. My understanding of this case had deepened tenfold by the time I finished reading the book (as well as its exhaustive end notes). Every opportunity is given to advocates of the boys' guilt to bring to light those missing "true facts." It is utterly horrifying to see how this process actually casts more doubt on the case that the prosecutors and police created. The horror is compounded by the obvious fact that Leveritt is not presenting a slanted version of the story. She goes above and beyond to find those crucial "true facts" that will establish guilt. But it seems they don't exist.
The documentaries, website materials and other information about this case (I've been semi-obsessed with it since 1996) have always left vague, nagging doubts in my mind. This book erased them.

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Phantom Stallion: Wild Horse Island #6: Sea Shadow Review

Phantom Stallion: Wild Horse Island #6: Sea Shadow
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Yet another good WHI book. This was probably one of my favorites. Kit finally gets his horse, a pewter mare (I think) named Medusa. She sounds pretty, and Cricket seemed nice, too. It was maybe a little surprising when Duxelles helped a foal.

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When an earthquake sets off a tsunami on the shores of Wild Horse Island, the mustangs of Crimson Vale are chased by the waves and left stranded on a dangerous hilltop.

Darby knows the lead mare, Medusa, will do anything to save her herd—but will she let the ranch hands bring her to safety? Or is it up to Darby to save Medusa and her band—before they're lost forever?
--This text refers to the Kindle Edition edition.

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Ebon Moon Review

Ebon Moon
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great book. i have been reading it nonstop.... im curios whats going to happen... i hope the werewolf does not die.... but i will see when i get to the end

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The Straits Review

The Straits
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After a hurricane took the life of both his sister and his mother, Jim Beauregard now resides in a FEMA trailer with his aunt Mel. When Jim is fired after his arch-enemy sets him up and with FEMA placing The Straits under eviction, Jim's only hope is cards. Though participating in an illegal underground poker ring may be risky, Jim has no choice. Can one simple hand of Hold 'Em Texas get Jim enough money to survive eviction and even get Hollis Mulwray off his back for good? Or is there something more important at risk here?
.........
The Straits was an Ace read, not to mention there was a Full House of spectacular characters. Not only was it an edgy story of a guy living in a hurricane-depressed neighborhood who also constantly gets a bad reputation; but the story of letting go of self-blame. (Oh, yeah and I always wondered what really happened to all those people who lost their homes and were supposedly helped by FEMA.)
The book's settings leaped right out of the pages and into your mind. Jim and other important character's backgrounds were easily told in just a few short chapters leaving plenty of room for the emotional side of the story. Even though Jim's situations were not always pleasant, the storyline was absorbing: the characters, the poker games, the local teen hangout, the mysterious trailer, and the best ending you could ever hope for. I knew Hollis would get what was coming to him sooner or later, but what did happen was the best play yet.
You know what I truly liked about this book? The Straits was written so smoothly, it was like watching an actual movie in your head-even down to the last little camera shot detail. Since the author is a graduate student in a film program at Colombia University, welp, maybe someday The Straits will really come to life.... on the big screen.
Overall The Straits was a brilliant emotional journey of letting go, and one heck of a poker game.Genre: Realistic/Contemporary, Tragedy, Drama
Age Group: YA, ages 14+ Content: Some language, drinking
Personally Enjoyed It: 4/5 Rating (based on content): 3/5

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He could have saved them.

When a hurricane ripped through Florida last year, it leveled high school student Jim Beauregard's house—while his mom and sister were trapped inside.

Now "home" is a FEMA trailer, shared with his overweight and disabled aunt. Facing eviction, Jim's got to earn enough money for a new place, fast. But when he loses his construction job after being duped by his nemesis, Hollis Mulwray, Jim's got nothing left. Only by joining an underground poker gambling ring does he see a glimmer of hope—in a roomful of dangerous (and possibly crazy) older men.

But more could be at stake than he realizes.


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Last Seen in Aberdeen: A Sergent Mornay Mystery (Scottish Mystery Series) Review

Last Seen in Aberdeen: A Sergent Mornay Mystery (Scottish Mystery Series)
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Young Matthew Adair was LAST SEEN IN ABERDEEN in broad daylight and then in the twinkling of an eye he vanished. No ransom demand was ever made and a Scottish task force was convened to find the child that caught the whole nation's attention. It was during a traffic accident when a horse trailer turned upside down that Matthews' lifeless body was found, the victim of blunt force trauma to the head. Also, inside the trailer were two dead lambs that belonged to Finovar Castle.
CID sergeant Seth Mornay is currently working the case trying to find the boy's killer. The job is not made easier by Deputy Justice Minister Lord Mindo Gordon, who is using Matthew's death to make a bigger name for himself by insisting the police are not working hard enough to find the killer. If that wasn't enough Mornay's father is under investigation for smuggling drugs and Pamela who is carrying his child is in a coma in a hospital while her sister is threatening to sue Seth for custody. Evidence in Matthew's murder seems to implicate the inhabitants of Finovar Castle and in particular David Lockward who refuses to tell the police where he was on the day Matthew was kidnapped.
M.G. Kincaid has written a brilliantly plotted British police procedural that stars Seth Mornay who first appeared in THE LAST VICTIM IN GLENN ROSS. Readers gain more insight into the complex character of the hero whose professional and personal lives are falling to pieces. LAST SEEN IN ABERDEEN gives armchair travelers a feel for what life in Scotland is like. This author's star is on the rise.
Harriet Klausner


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In her acclaimed mystery debut, M.G. Kincaid introduced the complex Scottish detective Seth Mornay. Now Mornay must solve a murder while caught between the spotlight of unwanted fame and the shadowy past he'd hoped to leave behind. After the events of The Last Victim in Glen Ross, the image-conscious authorities have branded CID Sergeant Mornay a hero -- a label he would rather shun. But when Mornay is assigned the high-profile case of a young boy's disappearance, his best efforts fail: the murdered boy's body is found not far from his home. While wading through a list of evasive suspects, Mornay's own life threatens to come undone when his long-estranged father becomes a prime suspect in a heroin smuggling case -- a situation made worse by the unwelcome return of a bitter adversary to the Grampian Police department. Now, with both his career and his father's life on the block, Mornay must overcome all obstacles -- both professional and personal -- in the hunt for a child killer....--This text refers to the Kindle Edition edition.

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