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Vivian was just seventeen and in a hurry to get out of high school at the start of this series. She had a list of "wants." She wanted to disappear. She wanted her father to get out of the Witness Protection Program and she wanted her younger brother, Vince, to leave her alone. No one had ever seen Vivian and Vince simultaneously. Some thought she made him up. She became living proof you are who you say you are. She wanted to write a book about herself and family secrets. She finished her book and disappeared. At least she said she did. Along the way, Vince seems to have stolen her soul, along…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Vivian was just seventeen and in a hurry to get out of high school at the start of this series. She had a list of "wants." She wanted to disappear. She wanted her father to get out of the Witness Protection Program and she wanted her younger brother, Vince, to leave her alone. No one had ever seen Vivian and Vince simultaneously. Some thought she made him up. She became living proof you are who you say you are. She wanted to write a book about herself and family secrets. She finished her book and disappeared. At least she said she did. Along the way, Vince seems to have stolen her soul, along with her identity. That psychological trauma begat Vinessa. She's more worldly, and wealthy, but still afflicted with a mental disorder she cannot fathom. A vile creature they call Julia Baby surfaces after killing her father. Vince thinks he's now in charge and doesn't want Vivian writing any more books. Vinessa knows about both. The hunt is on. They eliminate Julia Baby. Back in Phoenix, Arizona, after traveling the world, Vinessa is under treatment for Dissociative Identity Disorder. She keeps Vince, her altered state at bay. She allows Garrison, her mental health counselor to move into her home. Vince shows up to save her and himself. He badly underestimates Garrison, who does his level best to eliminate Vivian, Vince and Vinessa. They have no idea how upside down their shared memories are about to become.
Autorenporträt
I am a retiring lawyer, a working author, and a preserving blogger. I was a full-time trial lawyer for thirty-two years in a large Phoenix firm. I was a part-time law professor for the last twenty-nine years. As of summer, 2023, I am writing, publishing, and blogging full time. My first book was a textbook published by the Arizona State Bar Association. My first novel was published by the University of New Mexico Press. I've written ten novels and eight nonfiction titles as of July 2023.From the day I entered law school, I've been reading cases, statutory law and writing about legal conundrums and flaws in our criminal and civil justice systems. I've always read novels, nonfiction, and historical fiction by great authors who were never corrupted by the staid habits of trial lawyers. I write long-form, interspersed with the occasional blog, op-ed, or essay. One of the unexpected benefits of reading the law is learning how to write about it. Somewhere along the trajectory from a baby lawyer to a senior one, I became intoxicated with blending nonfiction with fiction in books, rather than legal documents. After spending thirty years in courtrooms trying cases, I started writing aboutthem. That led to writing novels while borrowing from famous historical settings and lesser-known characters. My courtroom days were chock full of ideas, notions, and hopes about ultimately becoming an author. I organized and memorized critical information for judges, juries, and clients. Now I use that experience to write vivid fiction and immersive nonfiction. I moved away from trial practice to teaching law students how to use creative writing techniques to tell their client's stories, in short form.F. Scott Fitzgerald said, "All good writing is swimming under water and holding your breath." The same could be said of my transition from trying cases to writing crime fiction. I've been holding my breath for twenty years waiting for galley proofs and book reviews. Anais Nin spoke for all of us when she said, "We write to taste life twice."My first novel, The Gallup 14, won a coveted starred review from Publishers Weekly. I won a Spur Award from Western Writers of America in 2004 for my first nonfiction book ("Miranda, The Story of America's Right to Remain Silent"). I won the 2010 Arizona Book of the Year Award, The Glyph Award, and a Southwest Publishing Top Twenty award in 2010, for "Innocent Until Interrogated-The Story of the Buddhist Temple Massacre." My third nonfiction title ("Anatomy of a Confession-The Debra Milke Case") was highly acclaimed. My nonfiction title "CALL HIM MAC-Ernest W. McFarland-The Arizona Years" was widely and favorably reviewed. My latest nonfiction crime book, "Nobody Did Anything Wrong But Me, was published by Twelve Tables Press, one of America's most distinguished publisher of law books about important legal issues. No New York Times bestsellers, yet.