Friday, August 17, 2007

Why was a woman abducted in Cancun and painted blue?

And what do humming bird feathers have to do with all this?

This is what Steve Woodruff wrote in his review: "I won’t give the plot away, but in brief, there are shenanigans going in the top echelons of a drug company, and the novel’s protagonist, Alex McGraw, ends up finding out the shady stuff and blows the whistle. People start disappearing. Human chess pieces move and counter-move, and some end up out of play. Oh, and one lady gets painted blue."

Want to know why the lady was painted blue and what happened to her?

Download the first five chapers of Killer Drug free, right here!

Ed Stackler in his revew called it "A stand-out thriller fueled by real experience."

"For readers who love escapist thrillers as I do, this novel delivers a fluid, fast-paced ride that outdoes virtually all its "financial thriller" competition.

"But what makes the novel truly exceptional is that -- like most great fiction -- it's rooted in real-life experience. Like his novel's protagonist, Peter Rost blew the whistle at a major pharmaceutical company (actually, at two of them). Without that experience, no author could do what Rost does -- make his own hero's whistleblowing journey a visceral and emotionally charged journey where the stakes are unimaginably high."

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