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  • Format: ePub

The President of the United States has slapped an embargo on a rogue Iran. He has asked his intelligence service for a call to action. He wants some questions answered. Getting those answers requires thinking outside the box. And, someone has come up with a wild idea: bring in Kimberly Powers, the Marriage Buster, to break up a marriage.
Lucas Bowman gets a mysterious call from the Bureau of Intelligence and Research. Days later he is recruited to join Kimberly Powers in an off-the-books government operation to break up the marriage of a United Arab Emirates' Prince married to an Iranian
…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
The President of the United States has slapped an embargo on a rogue Iran. He has asked his intelligence service for a call to action. He wants some questions answered. Getting those answers requires thinking outside the box. And, someone has come up with a wild idea: bring in Kimberly Powers, the Marriage Buster, to break up a marriage.
Lucas Bowman gets a mysterious call from the Bureau of Intelligence and Research. Days later he is recruited to join Kimberly Powers in an off-the-books government operation to break up the marriage of a United Arab Emirates' Prince married to an Iranian woman from an influential Iranian family.
The operation's objective: break up the marriage to preserve the Prince's allegiance to America in the politically explosive Persian Gulf region.
The Plan: The Prince has a weakness...an obsession with odalisques, mythical sex slaves of past Sultans' harems. His art collection of odalisque paintings is the finest in the world. What will be his reaction when he discovers odalisque paintings of Kimberly Powers, then meets her?


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Autorenporträt
PETER P. SELLERS

Brevity here is key. But, brevity is often a subjective thing.

I want my biography to read like I was telling a story to a stranger on a long train ride. To begin such a self-serving exercise there has to have been a reason why my listener showed an interest in such an aggrandizing exercise. In my fantasy about the character motivations and biographical references I might mention to my stranger-on-the-train, the listener has read one of my books and enjoyed it; and he, or she, wants to know a little more about the characters, the why, the how, and, some stuff about me. That's exactly what I'd want to know if I ever got the chance to share an overnight commuter with Walter Farley, Len Deighton, Phillip Kerr, Ian Rankin, Raymond Chandler, or John D. MacDonald...you get my point.

Any author's bio ought to enlighten a reader to his or her family life, schooling, living environment, education, relationships, and how they affected the choice of genres, settings, characters, themes, and point of view in their writing. Every author who endures includes or alludes to some of their roots in every story they tell. If you came from poverty, were born to wealth, had teachers for parents, or was a working member of a police department, those impressions and memories can't help but surface. That's the case with me. Why hide it? Embrace it. It's all about moving a reader with your own "bio" and your own characters.

I had four siblings. We grew up in rural Western New York. We rode a school bus to a central school. I was unruly and disruptive, regularly punished for being overzealous. I was routinely disciplined with "detention" in the school library. The librarian was an elderly lady (probably early forty's) who was put in charge of our small group of repeat misfits. As we would gather to serve our "sentences" she would point to stacks of un-filed books and with a slight wave gesture start the process of us returning books to the shelves in compliance with the Dewey Decimal System. I liked holding hardback books.

Mrs. Cummings liked me. She made me an offer one day during my freshman year of high school: "start reading books while your here, write me book reports, and I'll let you out early." I vividly remember the first book she suggested...Walter Farley's Black Stallion. Nothing before or after (except girls) had the effect on me that that book did. I became obsessed with the dreamy perception of horses...