Sunday, September 5, 2021

Patience

 


Thomas Rhett has a song that has been out awhile. “Sixteen” tells us of teens eager to grow up. Each chorus changes beginning with sixteen, then eighteen, then twenty-one, until the last chorus or verse is:

            Now that I’m twenty-five, and I’m drinking wine with my wife at home

            Got a couple dogs and a couple songs on the radio

            And we sit around, and we laugh at how we used to be

            When all we cared about was turning sixteen.

I have to admit, patience is not one of my strong suits. Not at all.

Having been around kids for forty-six years now, I recognize their impatience in myself at their age:

            Can’t wait to drive.

            Can’t wait for Homecoming and Prom.

            Can’t wait to graduate.

            Can’t wait to go to college or get a job.

Can’t wait.

Yet, we do wait. And sometimes we wait so long we forget what it was we were waiting for in the first place.

Little kids are the best. When I was a long-term sub last fall for a third grade class, there was this boy who “couldn’t wait” for his first baseball game. I taught them virtually using a Google Meet, and Jackson asked me if I wanted to see his baseball shirt. Of course, I said I did, so he ran off, changed shirts, and proudly showed me and the class his game shirt, the shirt he was going to wear that evening. Of course, at 8:00 AM, the evening seemed like such a long time away. He had to wait.

The weekend. Who doesn’t look forward to the last bell on Friday afternoon signaling the beginning of the weekend? It seems like a long time on Monday morning when the alarm goes off at 5:15 AM, and we stab at the snooze button, trying to prolong when we have to roll out of bed, doesn’t it?

Our daughter, Hannah, and her fiancé, Alex, had to postpone their wedding a full year because of Covid-19. All the planning and preparation put on hold. There were others who had similar plans that had to be delayed.

This coming summer, Hannah and Emily are bound and determined to have a family trip to Hawaii. We vacation together during the same week in July, around our anniversary and Wil’s death, one day apart. Summer seems like a long time to wait when we just started September. A long time.  

All the waiting seems painful to an extent. And as I said, patience is not one of my strong suits. I want to get it done. Bring it on! Let’s get going! Get it over with! Now!

But . . .

There is much to be learned in waiting. Time and nature has its own metronome to follow. The older we get, the faster the metronome beats. The younger we are, the slower. When young, time slogs by. As we get older, time flies so fast. We try to hold on to it, grasp it, hold it close to our heart. Never letting go. Never, ever. Yet, we do because we must.

And while we wait, in patience, we enjoy the time we have at present, the here and the now, fully knowing that time ticks, it goes, only to be followed by other moments, some big, some small, to be appreciated and loved for what they bring us, what they do to us. Precious moments. All of time to be enjoyed, not sped through like a NASCAR driver at Daytona. Each unique. Each special. Something to think about . . .

Live Your Life, and Make A Difference!

To My Readers:

In one day, I received four bits of great news I’d like to share with you! First, I received two 5 Star Reviews from Diane Donovan, a Senior Reviewer for the Midwest Book Review, and Editor of California Bookwatch. One was for Stolen Lives, Book One of the Lives Trilogy, and the other was for my newest book, Blaze In, Blaze Out. They are:

Stolen Lives represents an exciting probe of abduction and unusual connections between fourteen-year-old victims, and is recommended reading for thriller and intrigue fans who enjoy stories that focus as much on rescuers and victims as it does on the perps.

Kelliher and his team of FBI agents face multiple challenges in a series of events that have remained unresolved for years. Witnesses tend to be murdered before they can provide further clues, and the four young victims' lives themselves prove mercurial and hard to trace or fathom.

At this point, it should be mentioned that this book is first in a projected trilogy. Readers who look for complex stories of murder, kidnapping, and ongoing investigations will be satisfied by a tale that introduces the setting, but holds the power to attract and remain unresolved over multiple scenarios and books.

Navajo boy George Tokay may hold the clue that has eluded Kelliher and his people for years. The only problem is—George has no idea what this special knowledge is. All he knows is that he's witnessed a puzzling execution. And he feels compelled to join forces with the investigators to resolve this case: "The Navajo boy of fourteen, who stood facing the death scene, was afraid of the dead boy’s chindi. But George reasoned that if he were to help find the dead boy’s killers and bring them to justice, the chindi would be satisfied and leave his family’s land. The worldly boy of fourteen, who wanted to join the tribal police like his cousin, was simply curious. He saw this as an opportunity to win respect and admiration from his family, and his grandfather, in particular."

From family relationships and Navajo ways to Jamie Graff, a policeman working with the FBI who makes new inroads to discovery, only to unearth more puzzles surrounding the kidnappings and police relationships, Joseph Lewis builds a compelling tale filled with satisfying twists and turns.

As the boys struggle to survive and the police attempt to find answers and hope in a seemingly impossible situation, readers are treated to a scenario firmly rooted in the author's research into child abduction and real-world events that translate well to thought-provoking fictional milieus.

Human trafficking and murder are difficult issues to tackle, yet Lewis does so with astute social, psychological, and investigative insights that keep his story realistic, involving, and unpredictable.

Even though Stolen Lives is part of a trilogy, it ends on a satisfyingly complete note, which makes it highly recommended as a stand-alone story for readers who typically eschew series titles.

Collections strong in social issues, mystery and intrigue, and novels of survival tactics will find Stolen Lives a fine addition.

And:

Blaze In, Blaze Out is a detective story that takes place in the aftermath of the conviction of a Ukrainian crime ring, where Detectives Pat O'Connor and Paul Eiselmann have finally brought the perps to court and justice has been served.

You'd think this would be the end of the story; but in fact it's the prologue to a new conundrum which opens with an intriguing image: "He sat his boney ass on the unyielding wooden bench in nearly the same spot, sometimes for up to six or seven marathon hours give or take, minus a lunch break or whenever the judge decided to give the jury a break. It wasn’t often, but it was enough."

Neither detective expected head honcho Dmitry Andruko to organize a vendetta against them from jail—but this is what takes place, and the quiet repose each officer seeks after their challenging case takes an ominous turn as elusive contract killers enter their lives to threaten everything they love.

Joseph Lewis specializes in a fast-paced action story that takes the time to build compelling atmosphere around its events. There are also subtle moments of comic relief injected into the story of multiple killers and attacks from all sides: "Being up in a tree helped O’Connor’s cell reception. So much so, his cell had vibrated almost nonstop."

He also presents the point of view of the contract killer challenged to do his job. This nicely rounds out the dilemma and viewpoint of the detectives as they face their pursuers and struggle to survive long enough to capture them.

It should be noted that some of the violent encounters, as when Indian boy Two is attacked, are graphically described. Mystery and detective readers will be used to this kind of description, and it's entirely in keeping with the plot.

There are also many surprises, as when the killer proves to have a heart, saving a potential victim even as he plots to complete his assignment.

It only goes to show that proving guilt is sometimes the beginning of the journey—not the end.

Blaze In, Blaze Out is highly recommended for detective story readers and libraries catering to them. Mystery readers seeking a compelling saga will find this story of detectives and four teen adopted brothers who face a clever killer to be fast-paced, involving, and filled with satisfyingly unpredictable moments, tempered by fine tension that builds up to a thought-provoking conclusion leaving the door ajar for more.

The other information I received was that Stolen Lives received the Literary Titan Gold Book Award, and Betrayed won Honorable Mention for Fiction-Crime-Mystery in the Reader’s Favorite Book Award contest. That marks the fourth award Betrayed has won. All of this leaves me both honored and humbled.

I have an author’s website, besides my Facebook Author’s Page. On it, I talk about writing. I introduce characters from my books, and I introduce readers to other authors. I also release snippets from those books. Mostly, it is my way of reaching out to you so that you get to know my author side of life. You can find it at: https://jrlewisauthor.blog/
 
Connect with me on Social Media: 
Twitter
 at @jrlewisauthor
Facebook at: 
https://www.facebook.com/Joseph.Lewis.Author  
Amazon at: 
http://www.amazon.com/Joseph-Lewis/e/B01FWB9AOI / 

My new book, Blaze In, Blaze Out, is now available for preorder. Use the promo code: PREORDER2021 and order it at the publisher’s website at: https://www.blackrosewriting.com/mystery/blazeinblazeout

Eiselmann and O’Connor thought the conviction of Dmitry Andruko meant the end. They forgot that revenge knows no boundaries, vindictiveness knows no restraints, and ruthlessness never worries about collateral damage. A target is a target, and in the end, the target will die.

Betrayed: A Maxy Award Runner-Up for Mystery/Suspense! A Literary Titan Silver Book Award Winner! A Reader’s Ready Recommended Read Award Winner! A Reader’s Favorite Honorable Mention Award Winner for Fiction-Crime-Mystery!

Betrayed is Now Available in Audio Book, Kindle and Paperback! https://amzn.to/3AfUUpS
A late-night phone call, a missing kid, a murdered family, but no one is talking. A promise is made and kept, but it could mean the death of a fifteen-year-old boy. Seeing is not believing. No one can be trusted, and the hunters become the hunted. https://amzn.to/2EKHudx
 
Spiral Into Darkness: Named a Recommended Read in the Author Shout Reader Awards!
He blends in. He is successful, intelligent, and methodical. He has a list and has murdered eight on it so far. There is no discernible pattern. There are no clues. There are no leads. The only thing the FBI and local police have to go on is the method of death: two bullets to the face- gruesome and meant to send a message. But it’s difficult to understand any message coming from a dark and damaged mind. Two adopted boys, struggling in their own world, do not know they are the next targets. Neither does their family. And neither does local law enforcement. 
https://amzn.to/2RBWvTm
 
Caught in a Web: A PenCraft Literary Award Winner! Named “One of the Best Thrillers of 2018!” by BestThrillers.com 

Caught in a Web is Now Available in Audio Book, Kindle and Paperback! http://bit.ly/2WO3kka

They found the bodies of high school and middle school kids dead from an overdose of heroin and fentanyl. MS-13, a violent gang originating from El Salvador, controls the drug trade along the I-94 and I-43 corridors. They send Ricardo Fuentes to find out who is cutting in on their business, shut it down and teach them a lesson. But he has an ulterior motive: find and kill a fifteen-year-old boy, George Tokay, who had killed his cousin the previous summer. Detectives Jamie Graff, Pat O’Connor and Paul Eiselmann race to find the source of the drugs, shut down the ring, and find Fuentes before he kills anyone else, especially George or members of his family. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07CKF7696    
 
The Lives Trilogy and Prequel are now available in both paperback, kindle and nook through both Amazon and Barnes & Noble! The links are below! I appreciate all the texts, requests, and messages I have been receiving. Thanks for your support and interest. I edited and revised each book. I am pleased with the results. I am thankful to BRW for their continued belief in me and in my writing. I hope you will rediscover or perhaps discover the Lives Trilogy and Prequel.  
 
The Lives Trilogy Prequel, Taking Lives:
FBI Agent Pete Kelliher and his partner search for the clues behind the bodies of six boys left in various and remote parts of the country. Even though they live in separate parts of the country, the lives of Kelliher, 11-year-old Brett McGovern, and 11-year-old George Tokay are separate pieces of a puzzle. The two boys become interwoven with the same thread Kelliher holds in his hand. The three of them are on a collision course and when that happens, their futures grow dark as each search for a way out. 
https://amzn.to/34nXBH5
 
Book One, Stolen Lives: Editor’s Pick by BestThrillers! Literary Titan Gold Book Award Winner!
Two thirteen-year-old boys are abducted off a safe suburban street. Kelliher and his team of FBI agents have 24 hours to find them or they will end up like the other kids they found- dead! They have no leads, no clues, and nothing to go on. To make the investigation that much tougher, Kelliher suspects that one of his team members might be involved. 
https://amzn.to/3oMo4qZ  
 
Book Two of the Lives Trilogy, Shattered Lives:
The boys are home, but now they have to fit back in with their families and friends. Their parents and the FBI thought the boys were safe. They were until people began dying. Now the hunt is on for six dangerous and desperate men who vow revenge. With no leads and nothing to go on, the FBI can only sit back and wait. A dangerous game that threatens not only the boys, but their families. 
https://amzn.to/2RAYIk2 
 
Book Three of the Lives Trilogy, Splintered Lives:
Three dangerous men with nothing to lose offer a handsome reward to anyone willing to kill fourteen-year-old Brett McGovern. He does not know that he, his younger brother, and a friend are targets. More than anyone, these three men vow to kill George, whom they blame for forcing them to run and hide. A fun vacation turns into a nightmare and ends where it started, back on the Navajo Nation Reservation, high on a mesa held sacred by George and his grandfather. Outnumbered and outgunned, George will make the ultimate sacrifice to protect his adoptive father and his adoptive brothers- but can he? Without knowing who these men are? Or where they are? Without knowing whom to trust? Is he prepared for betrayal that leads to his heartbreak and possible death? 
http://bit.ly/SplinteredLives  

Photo courtesy of Marco Lopez and Unsplash

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sunday, August 29, 2021

Unchanged, Really


Exactly 50 years ago, I was a senior in high school. 50 years ago! Dang, where did the time go?

I went to a co-ed boarding school that was once upon a time a Salvatorian Seminary. Still had some seminarians there when I entered as a freshman, but by the time I graduated, most, if not all, either left or graduated. It was (it suffered financial difficulty and closed way after I had graduated) located in a small town of St. Nazianz. Middle of farm country. Woods on three sides. A pond. Trails. Quiet and comfortable. Peaceful.

At this time of year, I was with the football team, practicing for our first game. We were pretty good for a small school. Only one loss my senior year. Classes were to begin shortly.

Back then, those of us who were eighteen worried about Vietnam and our draft status. Nixon and Watergate. The Democratic convention in Chicago. All of that. For most of us, though, we worried about girlfriends or boyfriends we might have, the school play and the musical group some of us belonged to, where we might go to college- if we could avoid the draft. What we might major in. What jobs we might pursue.

Harold, a speedster, went to North Dakota State University and played some football. So did John, though he played at the interstate rival. Neil, always an artist, went to an art and design school and works in New York at an advertising agency. Steve worked for a record company on their jazz label. Pete became a hospital administrator. Friends. Guys I went to school with. Some younger than me. Lost track of many of them. Thanks to Facebook, reconnected with a few.

50 Years Ago! Dang!

Not much has changed in those fifty years, though.

The seniors in my class wonder about what school they will go to. What jobs they might hold. Wonder if they will go into the military and if so, what branch. Wonder who they might go to homecoming and prom with. Wonder who they might call their boyfriend or girlfriend. Where they might live after school.

Annabelle self-published a heartfelt book of poetry. Ashton dreams of going to UVA and swimming. Brayden thinks he’ll major in business, though unsure what “flavor.” Sophia wants to study analytical math.

Afghanistan. Covid-19 and the Delta variance. Floods, hurricanes, and raging forest fires. Drought and excessive heat.

50 years, but honestly, really, not much has changed. Just a different cast of characters. All striving to do the best they can, where they are, hoping and dreaming for something better. Wanting to make their parents proud. Wanting to be happy. Make a living. Enjoy life. Living their version of the dream.

As a high school teacher and then a counselor and then an administrator, I watched seniors grow, and dream, and wonder, and struggle. Rob played basketball at the University of Wyoming for a time before he quit and ran the family ranch. His brother, Gene, played some small college football and now owns and runs a large accounting firm. Keith trains dogs.

Steve played some college basketball. Kurt played some college football and ended up in the NFL for a nice career. Taylor is a nurse. TJ plays soccer, and so does Thomas. A couple went to military academies. Others enlisted.

50 Years, but really, not much has changed.

As adults, we guide. We counsel. We push and prod. We worry.

We want them to have the best- especially those who belong to us, and those who we know and care for. They will have their own worries, their own dreams, their own stumbles, their own successes. And they will give birth to their own and in 50 years, will wonder where the time went, and look upon those who will follow their own paths, their own dreams. And all will be all right. Yes, it will. Something to think about . . . 

Live Your Life, and Make A Difference!

To My Readers:
 
I have an author’s website, besides my Facebook Author’s Page. On it, I talk about writing. I introduce characters from my books, and I introduce readers to other authors. I also release snippets from those books. Mostly, it is my way of reaching out to you so that you get to know my author side of life. You can find it at: 
https://jrlewisauthor.blog/
 
Other ways you can connect with me on Social Media: 
Twitter
 at @jrlewisauthor
Facebook at: 
https://www.facebook.com/Joseph.Lewis.Author  
Amazon at: 
http://www.amazon.com/Joseph-Lewis/e/B01FWB9AOI / 
 
I picked up two terrific reviews for Stolen Lives, Book One of the Lives Trilogy.

One is from Literary Titan, who also did an interview with me. You can find the interview here: https://wp.me/p3cyvH-7yj

The review, found at https://wp.me/p3cyvH-7rz in part, called Stolen Livesa fast paced crime novel in the how-catch-‘em mystery genre. A riveting murder mystery that slowly unravels a puzzling crime that will have readers furiously flipping pages. With realistic characters a reader can relate to and sympathize with, and a fast-paced and action filled plot, Lewis has created an engaging story that is a fantastic start to his Lives Trilogy.”

The other, from Best Thrillers called Stolen Lives A harrowing and unforgettable FBI thriller. author Joseph Lewis continues to tackle delicate subject matter that few can bear to think about, much less craft a thriller around. Lewis dares to get inside the minds of not only the killers, but the adolescent victims. Scenes told from the abductees’ points of view manage to be both heartbreaking and an incredible testament to children’s capacity for survival. The net result is a terrifying but important novel that no reader could possibly forget.”

Best Thrillers also named Stolen Lives an Editor’s Pick!

My new book, Blaze In, Blaze Out, is now available for preorder. Use the promo code: PREORDER2021 and order it at the publisher’s website at: https://www.blackrosewriting.com/mystery/blazeinblazeout

Book Blurb for Blaze In, Blaze Out: Working with a joint multi-law enforcement task force, Detective Pat O’Connor infiltrated a Ukrainian crime family, headed by Dmitry Andruko. O’Connor and his control, Detective Paul Eiselmann, were the linchpins in the guilty verdict. The two detectives thought it was over. Eiselmann planned for a quiet weekend with his family at home. O’Connor planned on attending a high school soccer game, and then head to Northern Wisconsin for a fishing trip with another cop, Detective Jamie Graff, and four teenage adopted brothers: George Tokay, Brian Evans, Brett McGovern, and Michael Two Feathers. But Andruko is ruthless and vindictive. From his prison cell, he hires two contract killers to kill both O’Connor and Eiselmann and anyone else in the way. The killers can be anyone. The killers could be anywhere, and the killers could strike at any time. The quiet weekend and the short vacation turn into a deadly nightmare as O’Connor’s and Eiselmann’s lives and the lives of the four boys are in peril.

The one- or two-line promo for Blaze In, Blaze Out: 

Eiselmann and O’Connor thought the conviction of Dmitry Andruko meant the end. They forgot that revenge knows no boundaries, vindictiveness knows no restraints, and ruthlessness never worries about collateral damage. A target is a target, and in the end, the target will die.

Betrayed: A Maxy Award Runner-Up for Mystery/Suspense! A Literary Titan Silver Book Award Winner! A Reader’s Ready Recommended Read Award Winner!

Betrayed is Now Available in Audio Book, Kindle and Paperback! https://amzn.to/3AfUUpS
A late-night phone call, a missing kid, a murdered family, but no one is talking. A promise is made and kept, but it could mean the death of a fifteen-year-old boy. Seeing is not believing. No one can be trusted, and the hunters become the hunted. https://amzn.to/2EKHudx
 
Spiral Into Darkness: Named a Recommended Read in the Author Shout Reader Awards!
He blends in. He is successful, intelligent, and methodical. He has a list and has murdered eight on it so far. There is no discernible pattern. There are no clues. There are no leads. The only thing the FBI and local police have to go on is the method of death: two bullets to the face- gruesome and meant to send a message. But it’s difficult to understand any message coming from a dark and damaged mind. Two adopted boys, struggling in their own world, do not know they are the next targets. Neither does their family. And neither does local law enforcement. 
https://amzn.to/2RBWvTm
 
Caught in a Web: A PenCraft Literary Award Winner! Named “One of the Best Thrillers of 2018!” by BestThrillers.com 

Caught in a Web is Now Available in Audio Book, Kindle and Paperback! http://bit.ly/2WO3kka

They found the bodies of high school and middle school kids dead from an overdose of heroin and fentanyl. MS-13, a violent gang originating from El Salvador, controls the drug trade along the I-94 and I-43 corridors. They send Ricardo Fuentes to find out who is cutting in on their business, shut it down and teach them a lesson. But he has an ulterior motive: find and kill a fifteen-year-old boy, George Tokay, who had killed his cousin the previous summer. Detectives Jamie Graff, Pat O’Connor and Paul Eiselmann race to find the source of the drugs, shut down the ring, and find Fuentes before he kills anyone else, especially George or members of his family. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07CKF7696    
 
The Lives Trilogy and Prequel are now available in both paperback, kindle and nook through both Amazon and Barnes & Noble! The links are below! I appreciate all the texts, requests, and messages I have been receiving. Thanks for your support and interest. I edited and revised each book. I am pleased with the results. I am thankful to BRW for their continued belief in me and in my writing. I hope you will rediscover or perhaps discover the Lives Trilogy and Prequel.  
 
The Lives Trilogy Prequel, Taking Lives:
FBI Agent Pete Kelliher and his partner search for the clues behind the bodies of six boys left in various and remote parts of the country. Even though they live in separate parts of the country, the lives of Kelliher, 11-year-old Brett McGovern, and 11-year-old George Tokay are separate pieces of a puzzle. The two boys become interwoven with the same thread Kelliher holds in his hand. The three of them are on a collision course and when that happens, their futures grow dark as each search for a way out. 
https://amzn.to/34nXBH5
 
Book One, Stolen Lives:
Two thirteen-year-old boys are abducted off a safe suburban street. Kelliher and his team of FBI agents have 24 hours to find them or they will end up like the other kids they found- dead! They have no leads, no clues, and nothing to go on. To make the investigation that much tougher, Kelliher suspects that one of his team members might be involved. 
https://amzn.to/3oMo4qZ  
 
Book Two of the Lives Trilogy, Shattered Lives:
The boys are home, but now they have to fit back in with their families and friends. Their parents and the FBI thought the boys were safe. They were until people began dying. Now the hunt is on for six dangerous and desperate men who vow revenge. With no leads and nothing to go on, the FBI can only sit back and wait. A dangerous game that threatens not only the boys, but their families. 
https://amzn.to/2RAYIk2 
 
Book Three of the Lives Trilogy, Splintered Lives:
Three dangerous men with nothing to lose offer a handsome reward to anyone willing to kill fourteen-year-old Brett McGovern. He does not know that he, his younger brother, and a friend are targets. More than anyone, these three men vow to kill George, whom they blame for forcing them to run and hide. A fun vacation turns into a nightmare and ends where it started, back on the Navajo Nation Reservation, high on a mesa held sacred by George and his grandfather. Outnumbered and outgunned, George will make the ultimate sacrifice to protect his adoptive father and his adoptive brothers- but can he? Without knowing who these men are? Or where they are? Without knowing whom to trust? Is he prepared for betrayal that leads to his heartbreak and possible death? 
http://bit.ly/SplinteredLives  

Photo courtesy of Jen Theodore and Unsplash

  

Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Tests


Way back when two of my sisters passed away from brain aneurisms, it caused a panic in our family. As I had mentioned in previous posts, I come from a family of ten. My sisters, Donna and Joanne, both passed away from an aneurism within a relatively short time between one another. It scared us.

It caused several of us to seek scans to see if we had a similar problem. I remember speaking to my doctor about it, and he said that the odds of one member of the family were pretty high, but two were, well, frightening. My word, not his.

I did my time in the “tube.” I didn’t know what to think. Only to find out that the test, if you want to call it that, would only show a weakness in a blood vessel or artery at that moment in time, but would not indicate a weakness later on in life.

Hmmmm . . .

Most of you reading this have been through school at one level or more in your lifetime. We’ve all had to study for and take tests of some kind. Some were easy, while some challenged us. On some, we did well. On others, well, not so much.

When I moved to California in the summer of 1987, I was informed that my California license to teach (I was a counselor, but it still applied to me) depended on my taking and passing the California Basic Education Skills Test (CBEST). Two tests: reading and math.

Reading was no sweat. I loved to read and still do. I knew how to write. But math? A far different animal for me. I didn’t have a love-hate relationship with math. It was and still is purely hate. Can’t stand it. I can add, subtract, multiply, and divide. On a good day, I can figure out a percent. That’s it. No more. But I knew I had to study and pass this dang CBEST.

I got myself a tutor. A really super math teacher at the school where I worked as a counselor. She was kind and patient, and didn’t laugh at me. However, her son in fifth grade, who sat across the kitchen table from me, did. Maddeningly, he would also volunteer to show me how to do some problems, and he asked his mother if he could check my work. I set out to prove to him and to the state of California I was smarter than a fifth grade math student!

I took the test. I sweated it out. I nervously waited for the results. 

And I passed! And the most surprising thing about the results? I scored higher in math than I did in reading/writing! A true miracle. I was almost tempted to see if I could walk on water.

We’ve all been there when it comes to tests, haven’t we? Some we breeze through. Others we stress about.

Blood tests when the doctor suspects “something.” C-scans. X-rays. Employment. Sometimes in our marriage or every-day-life, we stress about finances, our marriage, our kids- all of them tests of a sort.

Each day presents a test for us. Whether we allow small, or even big, things to bother us, annoy us, ruin our day. Each day we face the question of will we pass this test or that test- small or big, job related or life related or love related. And at night, we are given an opportunity to reflect on how well- or not- we did on those tests. Whether we succeeded or failed. Whether we almost made it, but fell a bit short.

But after each test and each day, another day dawns. Unless the test has drastic results, we live. We are able to move on. We are able to do better the next time. And even if the test has a result that causes us angst and pain, that tells us our life is shorter than it was expected, it is in those moments, minutes, days, weeks, months, and years we have left to do . . . whatever it is we need to do, to take care of, to be at peace. Use it wisely. Take care of it. Make it meaningful. Something to think about . . .

Live Your Life, and Make A Difference!

To My Readers:
 
I have an author’s website, besides my Facebook Author’s Page. On it, I talk about writing. I introduce characters from my books, and I introduce readers to other authors. I also release snippets from those books. Mostly, it is my way of reaching out to you so that you get to know my author side of life. You can find it at: 
https://jrlewisauthor.blog/
 
Other ways you can connect with me on Social Media: 
Twitter
 at @jrlewisauthor
Facebook at: 
https://www.facebook.com/Joseph.Lewis.Author  
Amazon at: 
http://www.amazon.com/Joseph-Lewis/e/B01FWB9AOI / 
 
My new book, Blaze In, Blaze Out, is now available for preorder. Use the promo code: PREORDER2021 and order it at the publisher’s website at: 
https://www.blackrosewriting.com/mystery/blazeinblazeout

Book Blurb for Blaze In, Blaze Out: Working with a joint multi-law enforcement task force, Detective Pat O’Connor infiltrated a Ukrainian crime family, headed by Dmitry Andruko. O’Connor and his control, Detective Paul Eiselmann, were the linchpins in the guilty verdict. The two detectives thought it was over. Eiselmann planned for a quiet weekend with his family at home. O’Connor planned on attending a high school soccer game, and then head to Northern Wisconsin for a fishing trip with another cop, Detective Jamie Graff, and four teenage adopted brothers: George Tokay, Brian Evans, Brett McGovern, and Michael Two Feathers. But Andruko is ruthless and vindictive. From his prison cell, he hires two contract killers to kill both O’Connor and Eiselmann and anyone else in the way. The killers can be anyone. The killers could be anywhere, and the killers could strike at any time. The quiet weekend and the short vacation turn into a deadly nightmare as O’Connor’s and Eiselmann’s lives and the lives of the four boys are in peril.

The one- or two-line promo for Blaze In, Blaze Out: 

Eiselmann and O’Connor thought the conviction of Dmitry Andruko meant the end. They forgot that revenge knows no boundaries, vindictiveness knows no restraints, and ruthlessness never worries about collateral damage. A target is a target, and in the end, the target will die.

Betrayed: A Maxy Award Runner-Up for Mystery/Suspense! A Literary Titan Silver Book Award Winner! A Reader’s Ready Recommended Read Award Winner!

Betrayed is Now Available in Audio Book, Kindle and Paperback! https://amzn.to/3AfUUpS
A late-night phone call, a missing kid, a murdered family, but no one is talking. A promise is made and kept, but it could mean the death of a fifteen-year-old boy. Seeing is not believing. No one can be trusted, and the hunters become the hunted. https://amzn.to/2EKHudx
 
Spiral Into Darkness: Named a Recommended Read in the Author Shout Reader Awards!
He blends in. He is successful, intelligent, and methodical. He has a list and has murdered eight on it so far. There is no discernible pattern. There are no clues. There are no leads. The only thing the FBI and local police have to go on is the method of death: two bullets to the face- gruesome and meant to send a message. But it’s difficult to understand any message coming from a dark and damaged mind. Two adopted boys, struggling in their own world, do not know they are the next targets. Neither does their family. And neither does local law enforcement. 
https://amzn.to/2RBWvTm
 
Caught in a Web: A PenCraft Literary Award Winner! Named “One of the Best Thrillers of 2018!” by BestThrillers.com 

Caught in a Web is Now Available in Audio Book, Kindle and Paperback! http://bit.ly/2WO3kka

They found the bodies of high school and middle school kids dead from an overdose of heroin and fentanyl. MS-13, a violent gang originating from El Salvador, controls the drug trade along the I-94 and I-43 corridors. They send Ricardo Fuentes to find out who is cutting in on their business, shut it down and teach them a lesson. But he has an ulterior motive: find and kill a fifteen-year-old boy, George Tokay, who had killed his cousin the previous summer. Detectives Jamie Graff, Pat O’Connor and Paul Eiselmann race to find the source of the drugs, shut down the ring, and find Fuentes before he kills anyone else, especially George or members of his family. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07CKF7696    
 
The Lives Trilogy and Prequel are now available in both paperback, kindle and nook through both Amazon and Barnes & Noble! The links are below! I appreciate all the texts, requests, and messages I have been receiving. Thanks for your support and interest. I edited and revised each book. I am pleased with the results. I am thankful to BRW for their continued belief in me and in my writing. I hope you will rediscover or perhaps discover the Lives Trilogy and Prequel.  
 
The Lives Trilogy Prequel, Taking Lives:
FBI Agent Pete Kelliher and his partner search for the clues behind the bodies of six boys left in various and remote parts of the country. Even though they live in separate parts of the country, the lives of Kelliher, 11-year-old Brett McGovern, and 11-year-old George Tokay are separate pieces of a puzzle. The two boys become interwoven with the same thread Kelliher holds in his hand. The three of them are on a collision course and when that happens, their futures grow dark as each search for a way out. 
https://amzn.to/34nXBH5
 
Book One, Stolen Lives:
Two thirteen-year-old boys are abducted off a safe suburban street. Kelliher and his team of FBI agents have 24 hours to find them or they will end up like the other kids they found- dead! They have no leads, no clues, and nothing to go on. To make the investigation that much tougher, Kelliher suspects that one of his team members might be involved. 
https://amzn.to/3oMo4qZ  
 
Book Two of the Lives Trilogy, Shattered Lives:
The boys are home, but now they have to fit back in with their families and friends. Their parents and the FBI thought the boys were safe. They were until people began dying. Now the hunt is on for six dangerous and desperate men who vow revenge. With no leads and nothing to go on, the FBI can only sit back and wait. A dangerous game that threatens not only the boys, but their families. 
https://amzn.to/2RAYIk2 
 
Book Three of the Lives Trilogy, Splintered Lives:
Three dangerous men with nothing to lose offer a handsome reward to anyone willing to kill fourteen-year-old Brett McGovern. He does not know that he, his younger brother, and a friend are targets. More than anyone, these three men vow to kill George, whom they blame for forcing them to run and hide. A fun vacation turns into a nightmare and ends where it started, back on the Navajo Nation Reservation, high on a mesa held sacred by George and his grandfather. Outnumbered and outgunned, George will make the ultimate sacrifice to protect his adoptive father and his adoptive brothers- but can he? Without knowing who these men are? Or where they are? Without knowing whom to trust? Is he prepared for betrayal that leads to his heartbreak and possible death? 
http://bit.ly/SplinteredLives  

Photo courtesy of Nguyen Dang Hoang Nhu and Unsplash

 

Sunday, August 15, 2021

Unsettled and Uncomfortable

 


I began my teaching and coaching career at age twenty-two in Wyoming. Far from Wisconsin where I was born and raised. Much different from Wisconsin in culture and lifestyle. While I thought I knew what I was getting into, I truly didn’t. Sometimes I think back and am happy for the three-year experience out there, but I wonder how I managed to. 

I lived in the town of Yoder, population 101. It had the Yoder Bar, a post office, and a gas station. There were no cell phones back then, and my phone was a landline shared with three other neighbors. In order to use the phone, I had to wait until someone else finished their conversation. I had never experienced that before. 

I chose to live and work in Wyoming because of my fondness for western history. My parents, my younger brother, and I had driven through it on our way to Yellowstone and to Glacier National Park. I think that brief introduction helped me make my decision to live there. 

A dry state. It seldom rained, but if it did, like clockwork, it was late in the afternoon. It would rain for a bit, and then the sky would clear back to a beautiful blue. 

Flash forward many years later.

This is the time of year when Virginia is hot and humid. You wake up, step outside, and sweat. Tough to breathe sometimes. The air sticky and thick. It hangs on you.

Several days this week, it was sunny all day until late afternoon. Then, clouds rolled in, dark and ominous. Thundered continuously, sometimes with lightning, sometimes without. And then it would rain. Like Wyoming, hard and driving rain. The trees behind our house waving back and forth as the wind kicked up.

And like Wyoming, then suddenly, the rain would stop. The wind would die down. The sun would poke through the clouds almost to say, “I’m here. I’m always here. Sometimes you can’t see me, but I’m here.”

Reassuring, isn’t it? No matter the many clouds we encounter, the sun is still there. Hiding, hidden, but there. No matter the wind and the rain, the sun is still there.

Tough to look skyward when there is wind, rain, thunder, and lightning. Hard on the eyes. Tough on the face. Instead, we duck down and cover up, scurry here and there, trying to stay dry and warm and comfortable.

Tough to look up when facing dark clouds and inclement weather.

Tough to look up when there is “weather” in our lives. Tough to remember there will be sunny days ahead, just as there are rainy, nasty days ahead, too. Sometimes there are stretches in our lives when all seems dark and ugly. Sometimes we forget there are, and will be, good times, too.

There will always be both good and bad, beautiful and ugly, fair and inclement elements in our lives to deal with, to live through. But we always seem to live through them. Despite the helplessness we sometimes feel, we get through. We always do. Something to think about . . .

To My Readers:
 
I have an author’s website, besides my Facebook Author’s Page. On it, I talk about writing. I introduce characters from my books, and I introduce readers to other authors. I also release snippets from those books. Mostly, it is my way of reaching out to you so that you get to know my author side of life. You can find it at: 
https://jrlewisauthor.blog/
 
Other ways you can connect with me on Social Media: 
Twitter
 at @jrlewisauthor
Facebook at: https://www.facebook.com/Joseph.Lewis.Author  
Amazon at: http://www.amazon.com/Joseph-Lewis/e/B01FWB9AOI / 
 
My new book, Blaze In, Blaze Out, is now available for preorder. Use the promo code: PREORDER2021 and order it at the publisher’s website at: https://www.blackrosewriting.com/mystery/blazeinblazeout

Book Blurb for Blaze In, Blaze Out: Working with a joint multi-law enforcement task force, Detective Pat O’Connor infiltrated a Ukrainian crime family, headed by Dmitry Andruko. O’Connor and his control, Detective Paul Eiselmann, were the linchpins in the guilty verdict. The two detectives thought it was over. Eiselmann planned for a quiet weekend with his family at home. O’Connor planned on attending a high school soccer game, and then head to Northern Wisconsin for a fishing trip with another cop, Detective Jamie Graff, and four teenage adopted brothers: George Tokay, Brian Evans, Brett McGovern, and Michael Two Feathers. But Andruko is ruthless and vindictive. From his prison cell, he hires two contract killers to kill both O’Connor and Eiselmann and anyone else in the way. The killers can be anyone. The killers could be anywhere, and the killers could strike at any time. The quiet weekend and the short vacation turn into a deadly nightmare as O’Connor’s and Eiselmann’s lives and the lives of the four boys are in peril.

The one- or two-line promo for Blaze In, Blaze Out: 

Eiselmann and O’Connor thought the conviction of Dmitry Andruko meant the end. They forgot that revenge knows no boundaries, vindictiveness knows no restraints, and ruthlessness never worries about collateral damage. A target is a target, and in the end, the target will die.

Betrayed: A Maxy Award Runner-Up for Mystery/Suspense! A Literary Titan Silver Book Award Winner! A Reader’s Ready Recommended Read Award Winner!

Betrayed is Now Available in Audio Book, Kindle and Paperback! https://amzn.to/3AfUUpS
A late-night phone call, a missing kid, a murdered family, but no one is talking. A promise is made and kept, but it could mean the death of a fifteen-year-old boy. Seeing is not believing. No one can be trusted, and the hunters become the hunted. 
https://amzn.to/2EKHudx
 
Spiral Into Darkness: Named a Recommended Read in the Author Shout Reader Awards!
He blends in. He is successful, intelligent, and methodical. He has a list and has murdered eight on it so far. There is no discernible pattern. There are no clues. There are no leads. The only thing the FBI and local police have to go on is the method of death: two bullets to the face- gruesome and meant to send a message. But it’s difficult to understand any message coming from a dark and damaged mind. Two adopted boys, struggling in their own world, do not know they are the next targets. Neither does their family. And neither does local law enforcement. https://amzn.to/2RBWvTm
 
Caught in a Web: A PenCraft Literary Award Winner! Named “One of the Best Thrillers of 2018!” by BestThrillers.com 

Caught in a Web is Now Available in Audio Book, Kindle and Paperback! http://bit.ly/2WO3kka

They found the bodies of high school and middle school kids dead from an overdose of heroin and fentanyl. MS-13, a violent gang originating from El Salvador, controls the drug trade along the I-94 and I-43 corridors. They send Ricardo Fuentes to find out who is cutting in on their business, shut it down and teach them a lesson. But he has an ulterior motive: find and kill a fifteen-year-old boy, George Tokay, who had killed his cousin the previous summer. Detectives Jamie Graff, Pat O’Connor and Paul Eiselmann race to find the source of the drugs, shut down the ring, and find Fuentes before he kills anyone else, especially George or members of his family. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07CKF7696    
 
The Lives Trilogy and Prequel are now available in both paperback, kindle and nook through both Amazon and Barnes & Noble! The links are below! I appreciate all the texts, requests, and messages I have been receiving. Thanks for your support and interest. I edited and revised each book. I am pleased with the results. I am thankful to BRW for their continued belief in me and in my writing. I hope you will rediscover or perhaps discover the Lives Trilogy and Prequel.  
 
The Lives Trilogy Prequel, Taking Lives:
FBI Agent Pete Kelliher and his partner search for the clues behind the bodies of six boys left in various and remote parts of the country. Even though they live in separate parts of the country, the lives of Kelliher, 11-year-old Brett McGovern, and 11-year-old George Tokay are separate pieces of a puzzle. The two boys become interwoven with the same thread Kelliher holds in his hand. The three of them are on a collision course and when that happens, their futures grow dark as each search for a way out. https://amzn.to/34nXBH5
 
Book One, Stolen Lives:
Two thirteen-year-old boys are abducted off a safe suburban street. Kelliher and his team of FBI agents have 24 hours to find them or they will end up like the other kids they found- dead! They have no leads, no clues, and nothing to go on. To make the investigation that much tougher, Kelliher suspects that one of his team members might be involved. https://amzn.to/3oMo4qZ  
 
Book Two of the Lives Trilogy, Shattered Lives:
The boys are home, but now they have to fit back in with their families and friends. Their parents and the FBI thought the boys were safe. They were until people began dying. Now the hunt is on for six dangerous and desperate men who vow revenge. With no leads and nothing to go on, the FBI can only sit back and wait. A dangerous game that threatens not only the boys, but their families. https://amzn.to/2RAYIk2 
 
Book Three of the Lives Trilogy, Splintered Lives:
Three dangerous men with nothing to lose offer a handsome reward to anyone willing to kill fourteen-year-old Brett McGovern. He does not know that he, his younger brother, and a friend are targets. More than anyone, these three men vow to kill George, whom they blame for forcing them to run and hide. A fun vacation turns into a nightmare and ends where it started, back on the Navajo Nation Reservation, high on a mesa held sacred by George and his grandfather. Outnumbered and outgunned, George will make the ultimate sacrifice to protect his adoptive father and his adoptive brothers- but can he? Without knowing who these men are? Or where they are? Without knowing whom to trust? Is he prepared for betrayal that leads to his heartbreak and possible death? http://bit.ly/SplinteredLives  

Photo courtesy of Micah Tindell and Unsplash

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sunday, August 8, 2021

Dan and Simone


It was perhaps my third year at the last high school where I coached basketball before hanging up my whistle. There was this kid, Dan. Friendly, but reserved compared to others on the team. Respectful. Man, could he shoot. Pretty good defensively, too. There were others who were better athletes, but there was a place for Dan on my team.

One day after practice, he wanted to speak to me. Dan and I sat in the bleachers by ourselves. He had tears in his eyes when he told me he gets nervous. He didn’t want to play in pressure situations. He felt he couldn’t play in pressure situations. He didn’t know whether to stay on the team or quit. He mentioned his father had this “condition” and Dan thought he did, too. When he’s nervous, he loses his hair. His father was already bald. Dan had a fairly thick head of hair worn in the style of the mid- to late-80’s.

I was stunned. I had already slated for him to be part of a seven- or eight-man rotation. I definitely had a role for him. I convinced him to stay on the team, to be a part of the team. The guys liked him. My coaches and I liked him. We wanted him. He agreed.

One night several games later, he again asked to speak with me. He said he needed to quit the team. I asked him why. He said he didn’t like sitting on the bench. He said he wanted to play more. I reminded him of our previous conversation, and he said it felt different sitting and watching. He didn’t like it. I told him the guys and I wanted him to be a part of the team, and I asked him to sleep on it.

The following morning, I walked into the social studies planning area where my desk was, and in a brown paper grocery sack was Dan’s uniform and warm-ups. Washed, neatly folded. There was a note that said, “Thank you, Dan.”

I was reminded of that incident when Simone Biles, arguably the best gymnast in the world, withdrew from Olympic events except for the beam. She said she needed to do that for her mental health. Some in the world didn’t understand and bashed her. Others who didn’t understand accepted it and praised her for coming forward and advocating for herself. I was in the latter group.

Biles stated she had the “twisties.” From what I understand, this occurs when the gymnast loses track of where he or she is in the middle of twists and turns and every other gyration before landing. It’s dangerous. For as skilled as she is and for what stunts she performs, for her to lose her sense of place could be dangerous and devastating. Serious injury can occur.

Simone Biles, like Dan, advocated for herself. Both advocated for their mental health. They had a higher purpose, and while Dan never had the world platform Simone has, he, like she, did what he had to do to help himself. Both had pressure. Both had expectations- from themselves, and from others. We had crowned Simone a gold medalist in the Olympics, before she ever boarded the plane to Tokyo. Dan had been my choice for game situations where I needed a gun from the bench to score some points. Both different situations, but in reality, both similar situations.

I was a counselor for eleven or twelve years. I was a teacher and coach and administrator for many more. I have been a father for twenty-seven years and counting. I understand pressure. I placed it on my players. I know, unfortunately, I placed it on my kids. I saw, and see, the results of pressure from the counseling office, the administrative office, the classroom once again, and from the kitchen table.

Some kids can take it, while others can’t. We purposely put them in those situations, don’t we? We praise them. We urge them. We whisper in their ear, “You can do it!” with an arm around their shoulder. And with a pat on the butt, we send them out again to go conquer . . . themselves?

At what cost?

We don’t know what kids around us carry on their shoulders or in their heart. We don’t know the burden, the expectation, the pressure they place on themselves, or the burden, the expectation, the pressure that is placed on them. To succeed. To perform. To be the best. It’s no different for adults than it is for kids. But I ask again, at what cost? 

I’ve seen kids in their later years walk away from the sport they “loved” and played from little on and seem happier for doing so. I’ve seen their parents shake their head as they wonder, “What in the world? Why?”

Whose world? The child’s or the parent’s world? Dan’s world or Simone’s world? Who is it that needs to be happy- the performer or the spectator? Something to think about . . .

Live Your Life, and Make A Difference!

To My Readers:
 
I have an author’s website, besides my Facebook Author’s Page. On it, I talk about writing. I introduce characters from my books, and I introduce readers to other authors. I also release snippets from those books. Mostly, it is my way of reaching out to you so that you get to know my author side of life. You can find it at: https://jrlewisauthor.blog/
 
Other ways you can connect with me on Social Media: 
Twitter
 at @jrlewisauthor
Facebook at: https://www.facebook.com/Joseph.Lewis.Author  
Amazon at: http://www.amazon.com/Joseph-Lewis/e/B01FWB9AOI / 
 
My new book, Blaze In, Blaze Out, is now available for preorder. Use the promo code: PREORDER2021 and order it at the publisher’s website at: https://www.blackrosewriting.com/mystery/blazeinblazeout

Book Blurb for Blaze In, Blaze Out: Working with a joint multi-law enforcement task force, Detective Pat O’Connor infiltrated a Ukrainian crime family, headed by Dmitry Andruko. O’Connor and his control, Detective Paul Eiselmann, were the linchpins in the guilty verdict. The two detectives thought it was over. Eiselmann planned for a quiet weekend with his family at home. O’Connor planned on attending a high school soccer game, and then head to Northern Wisconsin for a fishing trip with another cop, Detective Jamie Graff, and four teenage adopted brothers: George Tokay, Brian Evans, Brett McGovern, and Michael Two Feathers. But Andruko is ruthless and vindictive. From his prison cell, he hires two contract killers to kill both O’Connor and Eiselmann and anyone else in the way. The killers can be anyone. The killers could be anywhere, and the killers could strike at any time. The quiet weekend and the short vacation turn into a deadly nightmare as O’Connor’s and Eiselmann’s lives and the lives of the four boys are in peril.

The one- or two-line promo for Blaze In, Blaze Out: 

Eiselmann and O’Connor thought the conviction of Dmitry Andruko meant the end. They forgot that revenge knows no boundaries, vindictiveness knows no restraints, and ruthlessness never worries about collateral damage. A target is a target, and in the end, the target will die.

Betrayed: A Maxy Award Runner-Up for Mystery/Suspense! A Literary Titan Silver Book Award Winner! A Reader’s Ready Recommended Read Award Winner!

Betrayed is Now Available in Audio Book, Kindle and Paperback! https://amzn.to/3AfUUpS
A late-night phone call, a missing kid, a murdered family, but no one is talking. A promise is made and kept, but it could mean the death of a fifteen-year-old boy. Seeing is not believing. No one can be trusted, and the hunters become the hunted. https://amzn.to/2EKHudx
 
Spiral Into Darkness: Named a Recommended Read in the Author Shout Reader Awards!
He blends in. He is successful, intelligent, and methodical. He has a list and has murdered eight on it so far. There is no discernible pattern. There are no clues. There are no leads. The only thing the FBI and local police have to go on is the method of death: two bullets to the face- gruesome and meant to send a message. But it’s difficult to understand any message coming from a dark and damaged mind. Two adopted boys, struggling in their own world, do not know they are the next targets. Neither does their family. And neither does local law enforcement. https://amzn.to/2RBWvTm
 
Caught in a Web: A PenCraft Literary Award Winner! Named “One of the Best Thrillers of 2018!” by BestThrillers.com 

Caught in a Web is Now Available in Audio Book, Kindle and Paperback! http://bit.ly/2WO3kka

They found the bodies of high school and middle school kids dead from an overdose of heroin and fentanyl. MS-13, a violent gang originating from El Salvador, controls the drug trade along the I-94 and I-43 corridors. They send Ricardo Fuentes to find out who is cutting in on their business, shut it down and teach them a lesson. But he has an ulterior motive: find and kill a fifteen-year-old boy, George Tokay, who had killed his cousin the previous summer. Detectives Jamie Graff, Pat O’Connor and Paul Eiselmann race to find the source of the drugs, shut down the ring, and find Fuentes before he kills anyone else, especially George or members of his family. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07CKF7696    
 
The Lives Trilogy and Prequel are now available in both paperback, kindle and nook through both Amazon and Barnes & Noble! The links are below! I appreciate all the texts, requests, and messages I have been receiving. Thanks for your support and interest. I edited and revised each book. I am pleased with the results. I am thankful to BRW for their continued belief in me and in my writing. I hope you will rediscover or perhaps discover the Lives Trilogy and Prequel.  
 
The Lives Trilogy Prequel, Taking Lives:
FBI Agent Pete Kelliher and his partner search for the clues behind the bodies of six boys left in various and remote parts of the country. Even though they live in separate parts of the country, the lives of Kelliher, 11-year-old Brett McGovern, and 11-year-old George Tokay are separate pieces of a puzzle. The two boys become interwoven with the same thread Kelliher holds in his hand. The three of them are on a collision course and when that happens, their futures grow dark as each search for a way out. https://amzn.to/34nXBH5
 
Book One, Stolen Lives:
Two thirteen-year-old boys are abducted off a safe suburban street. Kelliher and his team of FBI agents have 24 hours to find them or they will end up like the other kids they found- dead! They have no leads, no clues, and nothing to go on. To make the investigation that much tougher, Kelliher suspects that one of his team members might be involved. https://amzn.to/3oMo4qZ  
 
Book Two of the Lives Trilogy, Shattered Lives:
The boys are home, but now they have to fit back in with their families and friends. Their parents and the FBI thought the boys were safe. They were until people began dying. Now the hunt is on for six dangerous and desperate men who vow revenge. With no leads and nothing to go on, the FBI can only sit back and wait. A dangerous game that threatens not only the boys, but their families. https://amzn.to/2RAYIk2 
 
Book Three of the Lives Trilogy, Splintered Lives:
Three dangerous men with nothing to lose offer a handsome reward to anyone willing to kill fourteen-year-old Brett McGovern. He does not know that he, his younger brother, and a friend are targets. More than anyone, these three men vow to kill George, whom they blame for forcing them to run and hide. A fun vacation turns into a nightmare and ends where it started, back on the Navajo Nation Reservation, high on a mesa held sacred by George and his grandfather. 
Outnumbered and outgunned, George will make the ultimate sacrifice to protect his adoptive father and his adoptive brothers- but can he? Without knowing who these men are? Or where they are? Without knowing whom to trust? Is he prepared for betrayal that leads to his heartbreak and possible death? http://bit.ly/SplinteredLives  

Photo courtesy of Kelly Sikkema and Unsplash