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In this third installment of the Love, Loss, and Honor series, Karen Williams-Schmidt's children are approaching adulthood. The week of her son Bill's high school graduation, he commits what may be the biggest mistake of his life. Bill's error starts Carrie Bennett, his best friend since childhood, down her own dark path of abuse and Stockholm Syndrome. Heartbroken, Bill bounces between temporary jobs on ranches and farms while also trying to find someone he can love. The conflict between the two rural youths leaves an international path of destruction involving competing Mediterranean crime…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In this third installment of the Love, Loss, and Honor series, Karen Williams-Schmidt's children are approaching adulthood. The week of her son Bill's high school graduation, he commits what may be the biggest mistake of his life. Bill's error starts Carrie Bennett, his best friend since childhood, down her own dark path of abuse and Stockholm Syndrome. Heartbroken, Bill bounces between temporary jobs on ranches and farms while also trying to find someone he can love. The conflict between the two rural youths leaves an international path of destruction involving competing Mediterranean crime bosses, Interpol, even a small Hutterite community. Then there is Paul, the law enforcement cousin of Bill's dead war hero father. What's his deal?
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Autorenporträt
Born into a large blue collar family, Herbert Wiens was raised to value the rewards gained from hard work. Starting the summer after first grade, he tagged along with his older sisters as they boarded the "Bean Bus" at dawn to pick berries and string beans in Oregon's Willamette Valley. From then on, he never failed to have an after (or before) school job to help with family expenses. In high school, he started working on North Idaho ranches. In college, he fought forest fires in the summer and started working nights in a sawmill to pay tuition. His college experience was interrupted by a non-negotiable invitation from Uncle Sam, requesting his presence for the next few years in an all expenses paid, Vietnam era, tour of the world. Upon discharge, not having anything else better to do until he decided upon a future, he returned to the sawmill. Life got in the way for the next twenty years. Then, he became a small businessman for the next twenty. Now, he is spending his time using a keyboard to torture editors.