2011 Red Adept Reviews Indie Awards: Thriller/Suspense
Thriller/Suspense
*Indie Awards are in no particular order, as they have all been given by different reviewers.*Indie Awards are in no particular order, as they have all been given by different reviewers.
The Prophet Motive
, by Eric Christopherson
San Francisco Homicide detective John Richetti spent part of his childhood living inside an infamous cult known as the People’s Temple. As a boy he’d lost his parents to cult-instigated mass suicide. The memories come flooding back when he investigates the bizarre suicide of a former member of Earthbound, a New Age cult—and suspects murder instead. To uncover the truth he infiltrates the group, along with police psychologist Marilyn Michaelsen.
The new recruits find themselves pushed to their physical and mental limits by a series of sophisticated brainwashing techniques as well as by a cult leader, known only as The Wizard, who appears to possess psychic and paranormal powers. Even the psychologist’s expert knowledge of cults can’t explain The Wizard’s feats, and it isn’t long before John, like his parents before him, surrenders his independence to another . . .
********
No Good Deed: Book One of the Mark Taylor Series (A Psychological Thriller)
, by M.P. McDonald
Mark Taylor discovers first hand that no good deed goes unpunished when the old camera he found during a freelance job in an Afghanistan bazaar gives him more than great photos. It triggers dreams of disasters. Tragedies that happen exactly as he envisions them. He learns that not only can he see the future, he can change it. Then the unthinkable happened and everyone ignored his frantic warnings. Thousands die. Suddenly, the Feds are pounding on his door and the name they have for Taylor isn’t urban hero. It’s enemy combatant. And, it means they can do anything they want to him. Anything at all.
********
The Undertaker
, by William Brown
Pete Talbott is a California native and harried Boston computer wonk still grieving over the death of his wife Terri, when he found himself at the wrong end of Gino Parini’s .45 reading his own obituary torn from that morning’s newspaper. Talbott figured it was all a big mistake
until Parini showed him his wife’s obituary too, and this was a mystery Talbott couldn’t leave alone. From a funeral home in Indiana, to car chases on the Dan Ryan, a bloody Back Bay townhouse, snipers in New York City’s Washington Square, sleazy lawyers, corrupt County sheriffs, mafia hit men, the FBI, an army of Chicago cops, and that unforgettable scene in the upper berth of an Amtrak Train, The Undertaker is a thrill ride with a touch of humor and romance. Someone with a penchant for sharp scalpels and embalming tables is planting bodies under other people’s names; and if Talbott doesn’t stop them, he and his quirky new
girlfriend, Sandy Kasmarek, will be next on the Undertaker’s list.
6 Responses to 2011 Red Adept Reviews Indie Awards: Thriller/Suspense
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Congrats, MP McDonald! I loved your book!
Thanks for the honor!
Thank you so much. I’m honored to be included in this group.
Congratulations, Eric! Congratulations, Mary! A well deserved honor!
I *loved* every suspenseful, page-turning minute of “No Good Deed.” Congratulations, M.P. McDonald!!!
Well done MP McDonald. I’ve loved both of the Mark Taylor series books, and can’t wait for the third.