Showing posts with label crime fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crime fiction. Show all posts

Thursday, February 23, 2023

Book Tour and Giveaway: Deaf Row by Ron Franscell

 

 


Deaf Row

by Ron Franscell

Genre: Mystery, Thriller, Crime Fiction

Retired from a big-city homicide beat to a small Colorado mountain town, ex-detective Woodrow "Mountain" Bell yearns only to fade away. He's failed in so many ways as a father, a husband, friend, and cop that it might be too late for a meaningful life. When he stumbles across a long-forgotten, unsolved child murder, his first impulse is to let it lie ... but he can't. He's drawn into the macabre mystery when he realizes the killer might still be near. Without help from ambivalent local cops, Bell must overcome the obstacles of time, age, and a lack of police resources by calling upon the unique skills of the end-of-the-road codgers he meets for coffee every morning—a club of old guys who call themselves Deaf Row. Soon, this mottled crew finds itself on a collision course with a serial butcher.

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DEAF ROW is more than a tense mystery novel, more than an unnerving psychological thriller drawn from Ron Franscell's career as a bestselling true-crime writer and journalist. It is also a novel of men pushing back against time and death, trying not to disappear entirely. DEAF ROW is a moving, occasionally humorous, portrait of flawed people caught in a web of pain and regret. And although you might think you know where this ghastly case is headed, the climax will blindside you.


Amazon * Audiobook * B&N * Goodreads




A veteran journalist, Ron Franscell is the New York Times bestselling author of 18 books, including international bestsellers “The Darkest Night” and Edgar-nominated true crime Morgue: A Life in Death.” His newest, “ShadowMan: An Elusive Psycho Killer and the Birth of FBI Profiling,” was released in March by Berkley/Penguin-Random House.

His atmospheric and muscular writing—hailed by Ann Rule, Vincent Bugliosi, William Least-Heat Moon, and others—has established him as one of the most provocative American voices in narrative nonfiction.

Ron’s first book, “Angel Fire,” was a USA Today bestselling literary novel listed by the San Francisco Chronicle among the 100 Best Novels of the 20th Century West. His later success grew from blending techniques of fiction-writing with his daily journalism. The result was dramatic, detailed, and utterly true storytelling.

Ron has established himself as a plucky reporter, too. As a senior writer at the Denver Post, he covered the evolution of the American West but shortly after 9/11, he was dispatched by the Post to cover the Middle East during the first months of the War on Terror. In 2004, he covered devastating Hurricane Rita from inside the storm.

His book reviews and essays have been widely published in many of America’s biggest and best newspapers, such as the Washington Post, Chicago Sun-Times, San Francisco Chronicle, San Jose Mercury-News, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel and others. He has been a guest on CNN, Fox News, NPR, the Today Show, ABC News, and he appears regularly on crime documentaries at Investigation Discovery, Oxygen, History Channel, Reelz, and A&E.

He lives in northern New Mexico.


Website * Facebook * Twitter * Bookbub * Amazon * Goodreads


Follow the tour HERE for special content and a giveaway!

$20 Amazon

a Rafflecopter giveaway


Monday, August 2, 2021

Book Tour and Giveaway: The Broken by J.J. Hernandez

 

 


The Broken
by J.J. Hernandez
Genre: Crime Fiction


Just released from prison, Julian Serrano is determined to get his life back by reconnecting with his son, maintaining a legit job, and steering clear of the life of crime that led him to prison in the first place. All while under the watchful eye of his parole officer, Diana Rivera. But while Julian fights to stay out of the life that cost him everything he loved, Diana struggles with her own heartache and loss.

Thrust back in the life when things don’t go as planned, Julian must decide who to trust and what plays to make. All while trying to keep Diana believing he’s staying on the straight and narrow. In an untangling web of betrayal, lies, and old debts come due, Julian and Diana must come together to save each other from the ghosts of their pasts.







J.J. Hernandez was born in Brooklyn, New York and raised in Brooklyn and Miami, Florida. He is a graduate of Sam Houston State University and has been a law enforcement officer in Central Texas for twenty years. He lives in Austin, Texas with his wife and two daughters.




Follow the tour HERE for special content and a giveaway!

Signed Copy of The Broken,
$15 Amazon giftcard
-1 winner each!
 



Friday, July 8, 2016

Interview with Miriam Pia, Author of The Double Life of Tutweiler Buckhead: An Adventure in Indianapolis.



What made you decide to be an author?  When I was 20 years old hanging around at home with my boyfriend (who I lived with) I decided to try to write a novel.  There were other writers in the family so this seemed less unusual.  Instead of giving up at page 123 or anything, in 6 months (full time uni student, part time job, living as a live in girlfriend) I had an entire rough draft.  I spent some of my free time for another few years honing the 2nd and 3rd drafts.  After more editing, I presently hope to finally get the current form of that novel released this year – in 2016.  It was because I was able to write an entire novel that it occurred to me that I could write novels. 
What do you like best about being a writer?  I like being able to use my strengths of being good with language, creative, analytical thinker.   In some ways I love it and so I am one but in other respects I just am one, so I don't have much choice....sort of like I am a woman – I don't have that much choice about that. In truth, I tried to get a day job as a philosophy professor.  I knew much of the job is teaching but I would also need to write a few books and some articles.  Writing a novel helped me to feel more confident about being able to do the book writing part of that job.
What do you like the least?  Suffering from being underpaid and the bad news of using the term 'writer'.  Most well paid professional writers do not even call themselves writers.  They are journalists or lawyers or professors, or newspaper people or columnists.  They work in Communications or Documentation.  Often when I say 'writer' I get a bad emotion about suffering from umemployment and the mixed reactions people have to 'doing it for love but needing to be paid and wanting to be paid well' instead of doing it either 'just for the money' or 'just for love – of course I would never accept any money for it' which are the two extremes out there.
Frustrated by the audacity of local villains, the sheriff of Marion County turns to the mayor. Urban fiction set in a real city, The Double Life of Tutweiler Buckhead takes some of the charm of vigilante comic book heroism and mixes it with the nitty gritty of contemporary crime fiction.

A band of champions searches for the missing pieces in the evil plot of a local drug kingpin in The Double Life of Tutweiler Buckhead: An Adventure in Indianapolis.

Ideal for those who love events of the outside world and the workings of the mind – characters’ actions and thoughts are portrayed in this contemporary novel – with just a touch of magic.

Miriam Pia has been writing for decades, including over ten years as a professional.  Most of her work was done without a byline and as a ghostwriter.  This is the author's first published novel.
http://miriampia.com/
http://sbpra.com/miriampia/
https://www.facebook.com/miriam.pia1