NEW RELEASE!
Authored by
Cal Clark
The well respected Judge Daniel Adams is murdered in the mid-1950s,
seemingly by his daughter Carrie. Police officials circumvent their own
investigators and have her committed to the Elm Hill Psychiatric
Hospital for Women, instead of being arrested. However, Carol Mason,
Director of Nursing, spots several clues which indicate that Carrie may
be innocent and that people in the hospital are involved in a cover up.
She works to solve the murder and uncover Elm Hill's dark secrets with
an informal team of associates who call themselves the "Black Angels."
Their efforts uncover a conspiracy of sex and greed that explains
the murder of Judge Adams and culminate in a night of discovery and
danger for Nurse Mason and Andy Russell, a university student who is her
temporary assistant, in Elm Hill's Violent Ward.
About the author:
Cal is an Emeritus Professor of Political Science at Auburn
University. While The Black Angels is his first work of fiction, he has
authored or edited 25 academic books. He grew up in New Jersey where he
graduated from St. Bernard's School and went to college, a B.A. from
Beloit, and graduate school, a PhD in Political Science from the
University of Illinois. He then taught at New Mexico State University in
the 1970s and the University of Wyoming in the 1980s before moving to
Auburn in 1992. He served as President of the American Association for
Chinese Studies (2002-2004) and won the Auburn Alumni Association's
Award for Minority Advancement (2007), the College of Liberal Arts'
Excellence in Advising Award (2004), and the Student Government
Association's Outstanding Graduate Faculty Member Award (2012), as well
as receiving a Pi Sigma Alpha Award for Teaching Excellence from the
American Political Science Association (1998). He and Janet, his wife of
47 years who is also a retired Political Science Professor, reside in
Auburn. They have three daughters, who are very excited about the
publication of this novel, and enjoy reading, hiking, and going to the
theatre.
A blog about our books, our authors, publishing news and trends, published and upcoming titles, and more.
Showing posts with label mystery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mystery. Show all posts
Wednesday, August 5, 2015
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
IN SHEEP'S CLOTHING
NEW RELEASE!
Authored by Edward F. Ciesielski, Jr.
This compelling story begins on June 6, 1944 when Corporal Paul Pinski of the 101st Airborne Division is killed in action after he covers a hand grenade with his body during the D-Day Invasion. At the same time in Highlandtown, the blue-collar section of east Baltimore, Paul's wife Lucy gives birth to their first child who learns at an early age the benefits associated with limited competition. Drama is found on every page of this story as the Dexter-type anti-hero follows his natural instincts that lead him down a road to success paved with the bodies of his rivals.
About the author:
Edward P. Ciesielski, Jr., aka "Ski," was born and raised in Baltimore City and currently resides in Bowie, MD with his wife Janet and son Paul. Mr. Ciesielski graduated from the Mergenthaler Vocational-Technical High School in Baltimore and later attended the University of Maryland University College. He served as a Prince George's County Maryland Police Officer from 1970-90, having attained the rank of Sergeant. Mr. Ciesielski's tenure with the PGPD includes service in the homicide section from 1976-1981 where he was responsible for the investigation of over 400 deaths. Included in those investigations were fifty-nine homicides of which only three remain unsolved.
While a member of the PGPD's Special Operations Division, Mr. Ciesielski and other squad members were temporarily assigned to the US Secret Service and arrested Arthur H. Bremer immediately after he shot Alabama Governor George C. Wallace and three other people at the Laurel Shopping Center in Laurel, MD on May 15, 1972.
Currently, Mr. Ciesielski serves as a background investigator for the federal government.
The impetus for Mr. Ciesielski's debut novel, IN SHEEP'S CLOTHING, is based in large part on his personal and professional life experiences as well as those of friends and relatives, especially his father, a retired Baltimore City Firefighter. He has begun work on a sequel, THE KIT, expected to be completed sometime in 2012.
Authored by Edward F. Ciesielski, Jr.
This compelling story begins on June 6, 1944 when Corporal Paul Pinski of the 101st Airborne Division is killed in action after he covers a hand grenade with his body during the D-Day Invasion. At the same time in Highlandtown, the blue-collar section of east Baltimore, Paul's wife Lucy gives birth to their first child who learns at an early age the benefits associated with limited competition. Drama is found on every page of this story as the Dexter-type anti-hero follows his natural instincts that lead him down a road to success paved with the bodies of his rivals.
About the author:
Edward P. Ciesielski, Jr., aka "Ski," was born and raised in Baltimore City and currently resides in Bowie, MD with his wife Janet and son Paul. Mr. Ciesielski graduated from the Mergenthaler Vocational-Technical High School in Baltimore and later attended the University of Maryland University College. He served as a Prince George's County Maryland Police Officer from 1970-90, having attained the rank of Sergeant. Mr. Ciesielski's tenure with the PGPD includes service in the homicide section from 1976-1981 where he was responsible for the investigation of over 400 deaths. Included in those investigations were fifty-nine homicides of which only three remain unsolved.
While a member of the PGPD's Special Operations Division, Mr. Ciesielski and other squad members were temporarily assigned to the US Secret Service and arrested Arthur H. Bremer immediately after he shot Alabama Governor George C. Wallace and three other people at the Laurel Shopping Center in Laurel, MD on May 15, 1972.
Currently, Mr. Ciesielski serves as a background investigator for the federal government.
The impetus for Mr. Ciesielski's debut novel, IN SHEEP'S CLOTHING, is based in large part on his personal and professional life experiences as well as those of friends and relatives, especially his father, a retired Baltimore City Firefighter. He has begun work on a sequel, THE KIT, expected to be completed sometime in 2012.
Thursday, March 18, 2010
MOTHERLESS SOUL

Motherless Soul, by Steve Lindahl is the story of Emily Vinson, a woman whose entire life was impacted by the loss of her mother when she was 2 years old. At 82 Emily contacts a hypnotist hoping to draw out hidden memories and to discover as much as possible about the short time she spent with the woman who gave her life. Glen Wiley, the hypnotist, teaches her more about herself than she had expected. He helps her bring out memories of many past lives, including an experience that took place on a smoke filled battlefield. All of Emily's lives have had the same tragic outcome, the loss of her mother at a young age. Her soul is caught in what Glen calls circularity, meaning that the tragedy will occur again and again unless she can break the pattern. She and Glen must revisit her past lives and use what they learn to find the other souls who are part of the circle. They must use the past to change the future. Emily's stubborn desire to know her mother is realized in intricate and unsettling ways no one could have imagined possible.
Excerpt (from Chapter Four)
Glen asked her to count backwards from one hundred. When she passed fifty-nine he started to guide her saying, “Go back, back further to a time before you were Emily Vinson. Keep going back.” His words seemed to run right through her body, like a shot of whiskey. Glen seemed to be growing distant, although she knew he was right next to her. She kept counting toward zero, even as he spoke.
Emily lost track of the counting. She was certain she’d repeated some numbers, but she tried to keep them coming. She knew she had to do what Glen told her to do. She closed her eyes. Shortly after that the dim light she could make out through her lids faded into absolute darkness.
“You’re slipping through time and space into a place that’s been buried in your heart for ages upon ages. Something important happened to you in this place. You’re starting to remember what it was like: the smells, the sounds, the texture of the world around you.”
Her eyes started to burn. Memories were flowing into her head after a period of nothingness and those sensations were different from what she’d experienced the day before. This time it was as if she were two people. The person she had been before the session began, the old woman nearing the end of her life, was now watching someone else from inside that other person’s body. The other person was very young, but in trouble.
“Talk to me, Emily. Let me know what you’re feeling.”
Emily started to cry. She wasn’t able to hold back. Her cry was the loud wail of a hungry baby. But Emily knew what she felt wasn’t only hunger. Something was very wrong.
Review: Jen Knox (Author of Musical Chairs)
This is a profound work about the cyclic nature of pain and one woman's desire to confront it and move on. The story begins with Emily's search to demystify the mother she never knew, the figure whom she believes to hold the secret that will break a cycle of discontent. Where this leads her is on a journey of self-discovery that begins with a trip to a hypnotist and introduces Emily to generations past. Emily's journey is filled with realizations that grow exponentially, and ultimately lead to a philosophical and spiritual awakening. This book is phenomenal. The chapters are short and engaging, and the writing is fantastic.
For a video reading of an excerpt go to - Motherless Soul
For more information about Steve Lindahl go to - http://www.stevelindahl.blogspot.com/ or http://www.stevelindahl.com/
To purchase Motherless Soul go to - Amazon, All Things That Matter Press, or Barnes and Noble
ON AMAZON AT: http://www.amazon.com/Motherless-Soul-Steve-Lindahl/dp/0984098496/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1268954921&sr=1-1
OTHER REVIEWS ON AMAZON:
By Steven C. Harrison Jr. "Steven H" (Greensboro, NC)
Being that I have always been fascinated with reincarnation, I am constantly on the look out for good fiction that captures this concept. I struck gold when I purchased this novel by Steve Lindahl. He incorporates the hypnotist's power to open doors to the past with several knowledgeable and well written accounts of the events that took place. The novel carries us as far back as the Civil War where one page turning event after another lead this circle of characters towards their goal of a profound self awareness. I highly recommend this novel to anyone with an interest in the realm of mystical possibilities.
Steve Lindahl writes with a rare mix of compassion, imagination, intelligence and maturity. Publication of his first novel is cause for celebration, and anticipation of more to come.
-- Bob Shar
"Lindahl has a remarkable way of exploring many different ideas within the context of his story, layering his work with rich texture that pulls the reader in and keeps the pages turning."
Joni Carter, freelance columnist for the News and Record
--This text refers to the Kindle Edition edition.
Emily Vinson's entire life was impacted by the loss of her mother when she was 2years old. At 82 Emily contacts a hypnotist hoping to draw out hidden memories and discover as much as possible about the short time she spent with the woman who gave her life. Glen Wiley, the hypnotist, teaches her more about herself than she had expected. He helps her bring out memories of many past lives, including an experience that took place on a smoke filled battlefield. All of Emily's lives have had the same tragic outcome, the loss of her mother at a young age. Her soul is caught in what Glen calls circularity, meaning that the tragedy will occur again and again unless she can break the pattern. She and Glen must revisit her past lives and use what they learn to find the other souls who are part of the circle. They must use the past to change the future. Emily's stubborn desire to know her mother is realized in intricate and unsettling ways no one could have imagined possible.
Being that I have always been fascinated with reincarnation, I am constantly on the look out for good fiction that captures this concept. I struck gold when I purchased this novel by Steve Lindahl. He incorporates the hypnotist's power to open doors to the past with several knowledgeable and well written accounts of the events that took place. The novel carries us as far back as the Civil War where one page turning event after another lead this circle of characters towards their goal of a profound self awareness. I highly recommend this novel to anyone with an interest in the realm of mystical possibilities.
By Dennis McKay (Chevy Chase, Maryland United States)
This is a story about reincarnation with an evolving mystery. Emily Vinson lost her mother at age two and was raised by a disinterested father, leaving a gnawing void in her life. The story begins with 82-year-old Emily with an overwhelming desire to learn about her mother who she has only imagined memories through old photographs. She contacts a hypnotist, Glen Wiley, and with his assistance she begins her journey into the past.
Steve Lindahl takes the reader on a fascinating and mystical exploration not only into Emily's past with her mother, but other past lives she led as far back as the 19th century. Motherless Soul keeps the readers interest as the plot has twists and turns and interesting characters along the way.
A good read that leaves you wondering about the many levels of time, especially the possibility of the time's circularity. Dennis McKay author of Fallow's Field and Once Upon Wisconsin.
By Kenneth A. Weene (Scottsdale, AZ)
Motherless Soul by Steve Lindahl is a mystery of a very unusual kind. Based on Lindahl's excellent knowledge of hypnotic past-lives regression and of history, particularly the Civil War Era, the author draws us into the characters' lives as they intertwine both in modern times and in those past.
The interesting premise of Motherless Soul is that souls can exist across time bound together in a recurring nexus in which certain central relationships and events repeat over and over again. In this book, the event is the death of a mother at the very beginning of her daughter's life. In the present time that death is attributed to accident. However, the daughter, Emily, now an older woman, tries to learn more about her mother. Through hypnosis, it is revealed that the death had actually been a murder.
Emily and Glen, the hypnotherapist, begin a journey to identify the interconnected souls as they exist in the here and now and to prevent the next murder. Their search brings the reader into contact with a variety of characters as they are living in the present and as they have lived in the past. Most particularly, we meet them in their Civil War Era existences.
The resulting story is one of love and jealousy, madness and determination, and ultimately of mystery. Not only does Lindahl tell a gripping tale but also he makes the reader give serious thought to the nature of past lives. (Kenneth Weene, author of Widow's Walk)
Monday, March 15, 2010
THE GREER AGENCY

I was never a reader of the crime/mystery genre. When Harris Tobias sent us his ms, I was a bit leery, but decided to give it a read. I'm glad I did-it is great. I love the protagonist and all of his escapades. The story is a series of plots that meld together to create a great, cohesive book. You'll love it.
The Greer Agency is a gritty detective fiction presented in 15 separate, but connected stories. The reader follows the development of private detective Mike Greer, the only PI in the Altoona, PA phone book. It's tough to make a living in a decaying old railroad town, but with the help of an anonymous benefactor, Greer lands some interesting cases-cases that he solves with guts and determination. Throughout the stories, his budding romance with Susan grows. Eventually, they realize they are right for each other.
Readers will find Mike Greer an accessible everyman with luck, pluck, smarts and a host of interesting friends. He finds his way into and out of problems large and small. Greer narrates the stories in a refreshing and original voice. Each story has its own plot and can stand on its own, but as the book progresses, the mysteries pile up and the plots get more complex until the explosive last story.
About the author:
Harris Tobias lives and writes in Charlottesville, Virginia. He is the author of several unpublished novels and hundreds of short stories. His fiction has appeared in Ray Gun Revival, The Calliope Nerve, Literal Translations and other obscure publications. You can find links to his fiction at: http://harristobias.blogspot.com/
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