Close
post-featured-image

Excerpt Reveal: Desperation Reef by T. Jefferson Parker

Desperation ReefIn this high-stakes thriller by three-time Edgar Award winner and New York Times bestselling author T. Jefferson Parker, (“A marvel…hits the high-water mark for crime fiction every time out.” —Gregg Hurwitz), a big wave surfer and her sons compete in the same contest that killed her husband many years before.

Jen Stonebreaker hasn’t entered into a big-wave surfing competition since witnessing her husband’s tragic death twenty-five years ago at the Monsters of the Mavericks. Now, Jen is ready to tackle those same Monsters with her twin sons Casey and Brock, who have become competitive surfers in a perilous sport.

When he’s not riding waves, modeling for surfing magazines, or posting viral content for his many fans, Casey Stonebreaker spends his days helping with the family restaurant — catching fish in the morning and bartending at night. Casey’s love for the ocean and his willingness to expose illegal poachers on his platforms puts him on a collision course with a crime syndicate eager to destroy anyone threatening their business.

Outspoken Brock Stonebreaker couldn’t be more different from his twin. The founder of Breath of Life, a church and rescue mission that assists with natural disasters that no one else will touch, Brock has lived an adventurous and sometimes violent life. Not everyone appreciates the work that Brock’s Breath of Life mission accomplishes, and threats to destroy his mission—and his family—swirl around him.

As the big-wave contest draws closer, a huge, late fall swell is headed toward the Pacific coastline. Jen’s fears gnaw at her — fear for herself, for her sons, for what this competition will mean for the rest of her life.

Desperation Reef will be available on July 16th, 2024. Please enjoy the following excerpt!


CHAPTER ONE

Hear Jen scream.

Jen Stonebreaker, that is, hollering over the whine of her jet ski, towing her husband into a wave taller than a four-story building.

“For you, John—it’s all yours!”

She’s twenty-one years old, stout and well-muscled, with a cute face, a freckled nose, and an inverted bowl of thick orange hair she’s had since she was ten.

She’s a versatile young woman, too—the high school swim, water polo, and surf team captain. The class valedictorian. A former Miss Laguna Beach. With a UC Irvine degree in creative journalism from the School of Humanities, honors, of course.

Right now, though, Jen is bucking an eight-hundred-pound jet ski on the rising shoulder of a fifty-foot wave, her surf-star husband, John, trailing a hundred feet behind her on his signature orange and black “gun” surfboard, rope handle tied to the rescue sled, which skitters and slaps behind her.

Welcome to Mavericks, a winter break in the cold waters just south of San Francisco, with occasionally gigantic waves, sometimes beautifully formed, but always potentially lethal. These things charge in and hit Mavericks’ shallow reef like monsters from the deep. A surfer can’t just paddle into one; he or she has to be towed in by a jet ski or a helicopter. One of the scariest breaks on Earth. Ask any of the very few people who ride places like this. Not only the jagged, shallow rocks, but sharks, too, and water so cold you can barely feel your feet through neoprene boots.

Mavericks has taken the lives of professional, skilled, big-wave riders.

Riders not unlike the Stonebreakers, Jen now gunning her jet ski across the rising wave, looking for smooth water to deliver John into the steepening face of it, where he will toss the rope and—if all goes well and the gods are smiling—drop onto this wall and try to stay on his board, well ahead of the breaking barrel that, if it gets its chance, will crush him to the rocky bottom like a bathtub toy.

He throws aside the tow rope.

Jen guns her two-hundred-fifty horses, roaring and smoking, up and over the wave’s huge back, and lands momentarily beyond its reach, the rescue sled bobbing behind her.

She’s got a good angle to watch John and help him if he wipes out.

She feels the tremendous tonnage of water trying to suck her back onto the wave and over the falls.

Thinks: Nope.

Throttles hard and away.

Steadies herself on the bucking machine, off to the side and safely out of the way of the monsters, where she can watch John do his thing. The next wave lumbers in—she’s always startled by how fast they are—and she sees John astride his big board, racing down the smooth blue face of his wave, legs staunch but vibrating, feet locked in the thick rubber straps glued to his board. He carves out ahead of the lip then rises, backing up into the barrel, casually trailing a hand on the cylinder as he streams along just ahead of the crushing lip—John’s signature move; he’s one of the few guys who does this daredevil-in-the-barrel thing, looking cool on a fifty-footer. He’s twenty-six years old, one of

the top ten big-wave riders in the world.

Jen hears the barrel roaring closed behind him. Like a freight train or a stretched-out thunderclap.

Jen smiles.

Jen and John. John and Jen.

Look at him, she thinks. This is it. This is why we do it. Nothing we’ll ever do will match it. Not love. Not sex. Not being a mother or a father. Not seeing God. Not mountains of money. Nothing. Nothing can touch this speed, this perilous grace, this joy, this high.

Then it all goes wrong.

The thick lip lunges forward like a leopard, taking him by the head and off his board.

The sharp orange-and-black gun hangs in the air above him, the leash still fastened to John’s ankle, then the fins catch and the board spears past John, missing him by inches.

He’s lifted high above the ribs of the wave, then pitched over the falls, pulled down by his board, into the raging impact zone.

Jen checks the next wave—well fuck, it’s bigger than this one—then steers the jet ski closer to the wall of whitewater that owns her husband. A bright red rescue helicopter swoops down, close enough to tear foam off the crest of that wave.

Two rescue skis cut wide semicircles around the impact zone, their drivers looking for a way in.

And two more of the tow ski drivers, bucking the chop in search of John.

The seconds zip by but John doesn’t surface. His broken board launches from the whitewater, just two halves hinged by fiberglass. No leash attached. Which, in spite of John’s quick-release coupling, could mean the absolute worst for him—the damned leash is still fastened to his ankle, virtually unbreakable, easily caught on the sharp reef boulders lurking just feet below the surface.

Jen watches for any flash of shape or color, his black trunks, his orange helmet—anything that’s not whitewater, swirling sand, and rocks. Anything . . .

She knows with the wave closing fast behind her it’s time to plunge into the mayhem.

Feels the monster pull of it drawing her up.

Circling tightly, checking the rescue sled, getting ready to go in, she pauses one fraction of a second and thinks—among darker thoughts: I love you more than anything in the world . . .

And in that split second, the next wave lifts her from behind and Jen feels the terrible vertigo of a coming fall while clinging to an eight- hundred-pound personal watercraft.

Her personal deathtrap.

She cranks the ski throttle full open, digs a hard U-turn into the face of the wave. Jumps the lip and flies over.

She’s midair again on the smoking contraption. Below her, no John in sight. Just his shattered board bouncing in the foam on its way to shore.

She lands behind the wave and speeds a wide arc to something like safety. Rooster-tails to near where John went down. Can’t get all that close.

She’s lost precious time. Precious seconds. A lot of them.

She grinds through the whitewater as best she can, crisscrossing the worst of it. A surge of heavy foam catches the jet ski broadside and flips it. She keeps hold, lets another wall of whitewater crash over her before she can find the handles, right the beast, and continue searching her blinding world of foam and spray.

Smacked by the chop and wind, she clamps her teeth and grimaces to draw air instead of brine.

In shallower water, she searches the rocks below. Hears the scream of the other watercrafts around her, voices calling out. The big-wave people mostly look out for each other; they’re loose-knit and competitive but most of them will lose contests and miss waves to help someone in trouble—even of his own making, even some reckless trust-funder wannabe big-wave king with his own helicopter to tow him in and pro videographers to make him famous.

It’s what watermen and waterwomen do.

Jen keeps waiting to feel him behind her, climbing aboard the rescue sled. She knows it’s possible: John has trained himself to hold his breath for up to three minutes underwater.

But not being pounded like this . . .

As the minutes pass, hope and fear fight like dogs inside her—a battle that will guide the rest of her life.

We are small and brief.

We are the human passion to stay alive, made simple.

She helps work John’s body out of the rocks.


Click below to pre-order your copy of Desperation Reef, available July 16th, 2024!

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of amazon- 75 opens in a new windowPlaceholder of bn -86 opens in a new windowPlaceholder of booksamillion -64 opens in a new windowibooks2 19 opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of bookshop- 65

post-featured-image

5 of the Best Rescue Shelters in the Country

The RescueBy Athena Palmer:

Congratulations! You’ve decided that it’s time to adopt a new friend into your life. But… where do you start? There are so many amazing rescue shelters out there that it can be hard to choose. Inspired by The Rescue by T. Jefferson Parker, here are 5 of the best rescue shelters in the country, in no particular order:


Austin Pets Alive!

Austin Pets Alive! | Blog

Austin Pets Alive! is a leader of the no-kill movement in the United States. They focus on creating programs designed to save animals most at-risk for euthanasia as well as immediate, lifesaving care for shelter animals in Central Texas.

Animal Humane Society

Volunteer opportunities and application process | Animal Humane Society

AHS is one of the nation’s leading animal welfare organizations, and they’re working hard to transform the way that shelters across the country care for their animals. From innovative medical and behavior programs to investments in outreach and advocacy, AHS is advancing animal welfare and creating a more humane world for animals everywhere.

Animal Care Centers of NYC

Animal Care Centers of NYC (ACC) - Staten Island Animal Care Center | Petco Love Lost

The Animal Care Centers of NYC work to ensure that companion animals across New York City are well taken care of and placed in safe, loving environments. They have multiple locations across the city offering all sorts of resources and adoptable pets. 

Arizona Animal Welfare League

aawl-campus

The Arizona Animal Welfare League is the largest and oldest no-kill shelter in Arizona. They rescue animals that are at risk of being euthanized and help them get medical care and find their forever home. They also specialize in providing resources and training to families in need.

Richmond SPCA

SAAF: Providing a safe harbor for family pets at a time of critical need - Richmond SPCA

I’ll admit that I may be biased here- I’ve adopted 3 cats from the RSPCA and have had nothing but positive experiences. The RSPCA is an independent nonprofit and no-kill shelter that provides excellent medical care, training classes, and resources for pet owners in Central Virginia. Their resource library and educational programs are extensive and put together with care.


Click below to pre-order your copy of The Rescue, coming April 25th, 2023!

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of amazon- 54

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of bn- 76

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of booksamillion- 45

opens in a new windowibooks2 84

opens in a new windowindiebound

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of bookshop- 41

post-featured-image

How T. Jefferson Parker’s Dog Inspired His Latest Book

The RescueThe Rescue is a gripping thriller that explores the strength of the human-animal bond and how far we will go to protect what we love by three-time Edgar Award winner and New York Times bestselling author T. Jefferson Parker. And he found that inspiration through his own, lovable rescue dog.


By T. Jefferson Parker:

On a stormy November morning two years ago, I woke up and decided that my wife, Rita, and I, should get a dog.

We had lost our beloved family Labrador some years prior and had been a little afraid to get another one, given the years of love and affection that a dog can give and take, all the joy they are, and what absolute misery it is to watch them die.  Not to mention the general obligations and limitations when building your time and travels around an animal who depends on you for everything.

“What kind of dog do you want?” Rita asked me.

“I’ve been reading about rat terriers and I want one,” I said.  “They’re small and cute and ferocious on squirrels and gophers.”

We live in Fallbrook, north of San Diego – semi-rural, oak and avocado country loaded with these tree, bush and flower destroyers.

“I don’t want a purebred dog,” said Rita.  “I want a rescue.”

“Why?”

“Everyone tells me how grateful they are.”

“Hmm.”

“Let me check the Fallbrook Animal Sanctuary and see what they’ve got.”

What they had, front of their web page, was a “terrier mix” named Rhett, rescued as a puppy from the streets of Tijuana six months ago.  He was diseased, tick-ridden, malnourished and terrified.  Now he was in perfect health and ready for his first home.

A Mexican street dog, and damned cute.

“Rita, you have to understand that if we go down and look at that dog, we’ll be coming home with him.”

“Exactly!”

When we got to the sanctuary, 13-lb. Rhett wiggled over to greet us, throwing himself at us when we knelt down to size him up.  He looked somewhat terrier-like to me, but I saw more Chihuahua and whippet in him.  A bit of Jack Russell, maybe.  Short haired, cream with tan ovals and spots, and those distinctive button/rose ears that so many Mexican street dogs end up with.

Just a note: there are a loosely estimated 18,000,000 street dogs living in Mexico without homes, medical care, regular food, or clean water.  They’re known as callejeros, “street dogs.”  They’re not neutered so they breed swiftly.  You see them everywhere, on beaches and in villages, cities, at the border crossings – mongrels begging for food, and sometimes willing to let you pet them on the hugely off chance that you’ll let them follow home.

At the Fallbrook Animal Sanctuary, Vicky told us about Rhett’s rescue from Tijuana.  She had video of him being lifted from the dirt road where he was curled up, resting with a look of resignation and misery on his flea-bitten face.  Vicky couldn’t really tell us too much about his life in Tijuana – how could she? – but she said he’d likely grow to about 50-lbs. and that he’d probably never lived in a human home for very long, if at all.  (Many callejeros are born on the streets.)

Now, here at the sanctuary, Rhett was a healthy, wriggling, goofy-eared dog that we happily snatched up and took home!

Over the next days I wondered long and hard – part of a writer’s job – what this little dog’s life was like in Mexico.  What was his story?  What had happened to him, both good and bad?  We renamed him Jasper for his high-strung, at times borderline neurotic behavior.

When two different DNA tests gave us eighteen different breeds of which Jasper is made – everything from the Korean Gindo to the German Shephard – it began to dawn on me that I wasn’t ever going to learn anything about Jasper’s former life than what his rescuers had told me.

There was nothing more to him to know than that ten second video clip of him being picked up from the street in Tijuana, and a couple of photos of him on a veterinarian’s table.

The more I thought about the first six months of his life, the more the mystery of it bothered me.

So, with only this wisp of a biography to work with, I did what any writer would do:

I imagined his story.

Here it is – THE RESCUE – a novel about a Mexican street dog who gets a shot at a new life in California.

And a whole lot more.


Click below to pre-order your copy of The Rescue, coming April 25th, 2023!

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of amazon- 49

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of bn -82

opens in a new windowPlace holder  of booksamillion- 74

opens in a new windowibooks2 51

opens in a new windowindiebound

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of bookshop- 7

post-featured-image

Excerpt Reveal: The Rescue by T. Jefferson Parker

The RescueThe Rescue is a gripping thriller that explores the strength of the human-animal bond and how far we will go to protect what we love by three-time Edgar Award winner and New York Times bestselling author T. Jefferson Parker.

While reporting on a Tijuana animal shelter, journalist Bettina Blazak falls in love with one of her story’s subjects—an adorable Mexican street dog who is being treated for a mysterious gunshot wound. Bettina impulsively adopts the dog, who she names Felix after the veterinarian who saved him.

In investigating Felix’s past, Bettina discovers that his life is nothing like what she assumed. For one thing, he’s not a Mexican street dog at all. A former DEA drug-sniffing dog, Felix has led a very colorful, dangerous, and profitable life. With Bettina’s story going viral, some interesting people are looking for Felix, making him a target—again.

Bettina soon finds herself drawn into a deadly criminal underworld from which she and her beloved dog may not return.

The Rescue will be available on April 25th, 2023. Please enjoy the following excerpt!


CHAPTER ONE

Night in Tijuana, light rain from a pale sky.

Inside the Furniture Calderón factory and warehouse, the Roman follows his mongrel dog as it noses its way through the cluttered workstations, sniffing and snorting the chairs and sofas and barstools and bed sets in varying stages of completion.

The dog stands on its hind legs to smell the table saws and sewing machines, the measuring tapes and clamps and glue pots, then drops back to all fours again to sniff the fragrant bundles of hides and the colorful bolts of fabric piled high like treasures looted from a caravan. Between stops, it covers ground swiftly, nose up, nose down. Its short, four-count breaths draw the air both into its lungs and across the scent receptors packed within its muzzle.

The Roman is in black tactical couture all the way from his polished duty boots to the black ski mask snug to his face and head. Black socks, a loose black kerchief for that band of neck below the mask. The dog’s black leash is bunched in one hand. Behind the Roman are some of his business associates—four militarized soldiers of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, and four men in humble street clothes instead of the khaki-with-green-trim uniforms of the Municipal Police, their official employer. They all carry late-model automatic weapons, some laser sighted and some with traditional iron sights.

Sullen and alert, these men trail the Roman and his dog, respectful of their sizable skills and reputation as a cash-and drug-detection team. The Roman has never told the men his real name, only his nom de guerre, the Roman. So to them, he is simply Román.

The dog’s name is Joe, and he looks more like a common street dog than a cash-and-drug-whiffing savant. Joe is a trim fifty-five pounds, short haired, long legged, and saber tailed, with rust ovals on a cream background. He is terrier-like and dainty footed, but his gull wing ears protrude from what could well be a Labrador retriever’s solid head. To these heavily armed men, accustomed to the burly German shepherd dogs, Malinois, and Rottweilers favored by the DEA and Federales— and the pit bulls adored by narcotraficantes—Joe looks amusing and almost cute. The Roman, on the other hand, is simply loco. But the Roman and his dog always find and deliver.

Joe’s snorts sound softly in the still, cavernous factory. His gently up-curved tail wags eagerly. He wheels and feints his way through the river of smells. Cuts right, then left, then right again, but moves forward, always forward. His ears bounce. He loves his job.

The Roman, through his ski mask, also smells the leather and the lumber and the faint dust-smoke of the incandescent lamps above. He marvels once again at Joe’s ability to experience these strong, obvious scents but also hundreds of others that he, a mere man, can’t smell at all. And not only does Joe gather exponentially more than any human, he instantly distinguishes these smells from the chosen few that are his purpose and his passion: fentanyl, heroin, cocaine, methamphetamine, marijuana, and currency.

And, of course, small animals.

Joe breaks toward a slouching stack of boxes, snatches a mouse off the floor, dashes it twice against the concrete—rap, rap—then looks proudly at his master.

Whispers and grunts and the metallic unslinging of guns.

“Joe, down, you sonofabitch.”

Then laughter.

Joe plops to his belly, head up, ears smoothed back in submission, staring at the Roman with eager penance. He doesn’t know what sonofabitch means, but he knows what the Roman’s tone of voice means.

“That’s one of the reasons they retired him,” the Roman says to no one in particular. His Spanish is good but accented by English. Learned in school, by the sound of it, not border Spanglish picked up on the job. “He’s got a lot of terrier in him, and some things he can’t control. Won’t control.”

¡Un perro terrible!” says a policeman.

¡Muy rápido!” says a cartel soldier.

“Come,” orders the Roman. Joe bolts to his side and sits, looking up hopefully. “Steady, Joe. Steady, boy. Let’s try this again. Okay, find!”

In the back of the vast warehouse, Joe alerts on a dented metal trash can overflowing with scraps of cloth and leather and wood.

He sits in front of his perceived find, as he has been trained. He looks first at the Roman, then at the trash can, but with a very different expression from his please-forgive-me-for-killing-the-mouse look. Now his ears are up and his eyes are fixed on the object of his alert. A quick glance at his master, then back to the business at hand. He’s trembling.

Two of the policemen quietly tip over the container while a third, on his knees, rakes out the trash.

Ah . . . aha!” he says, pulling a green steel ammunition box from the mound of trash, then another, and another.

The Roman can smell the gasoline that the ammo boxes have been wiped down with—a standard dumb idea for confusing a dog. He’s seen hot sauce, cologne, mint-flavored mouthwash, cat urine, bleach, and antiperspirant used too. Most traffickers don’t know that dogs don’t smell the combined odors within a scent cone; they smell individual ones. They separate and register each component of the whole. A book of smells, each smell a word. So no matter how you try to disguise a scent, the dog is rarely fooled or repelled. The dog knows what’s there.

The Roman knows the only thing that works against a good narcoticsand-currency dog is perfect packaging, but Joe has the best nose the Roman has ever seen. The much surer solution would be to keep your stash far away from dogs like Joe, maybe on another continent. Or to bribe the dog’s handler, or the handler’s handler. Money solves most problems.

A squat cartel lieutenant whom the Roman knows only as Domingo kneels and pops the heavy latch on one of the steel cases. It’s a standard US Army–issue ammunition box—twelve by six inches and seven and a half inches high—and the former contents are stenciled in yellow on a lengthwise flank: 100 cal. 50 cartridges.

As the rain begins to pound the metal roof high above, Domingo removes an open package of fragrant naphthalene mothballs from inside the box, then six neat vacuum-packed bricks of US twenty-dollar bills. The Roman knows that the old-school Sinaloans from whom he is stealing weigh-count the bricks to exactly one-half pound, which means this case contains $28,800. And he knows that $9,600 of it will soon belong to him and Joe, who is watching all of this with shiny-eyed pride. From one of the many pockets on his pants, the Roman gives him a cube of steak.

The other two ammunition boxes contain identical treasures, for a gross total of $86,400 for the Jalisco New Generation Cartel and the participating Municipal Police officers who have helped make this possible.

And $28,800 for himself, the Roman, and for Joe, man’s best friend.

But the raindrops suddenly turn into footsteps, faint but fast.

The Roman and his little army dive for cover, machine guns chattering away at them. Domingo, closest to the loot, goes down with a cry and a wobble of blood.

The Roman calls Joe but the dog has vanished in the horrific noise. The compadres return fire, their bullets clunking home or twanging in ricochet. The Roman knows he’s in a numbers game, and the noise actually sounds encouraging: four shooters, six? But this is the Sinaloans’ warehouse and they know it better than he and his men do.

“Joe, come! Joe, come!”

The Roman draws his sidearm, a .40-caliber Glock 35 with a laser sight that holds twenty-two rounds and will not jam. He calls Joe again but the dog is gone. The gunfire subsides while footsteps land in the smoky silence. The Roman runs from his cover toward the rear exit of the warehouse. Then a volley and a high-pitched yipe from Joe. The Roman strides straight toward that yipe, shoots down a slender sicario in a white cowboy hat and a Shakira T-shirt, turns and center-shoots another man, twice—boom, boom—the bullets slamming into the far wall before his body plops to the floor. The Roman is a big man; he knows he might take a bullet someday doing shit like this. But he loves it.

You wear the crown, you wear the target.

Joe whimpers to his left and the Roman charges the sound, zigzagging down a long aisle lined with mile-high shelves like a big-box store, and the Roman senses the enemy behind him, turns, and blows him down with three shots, the sicario’s machine gun clattering to the concrete

The Roman and his employers press the running battle toward the rear exit and the loading docks and the street. The Sinaloans are fewer, just as the Roman had thought. They’re running hard for the steel sliding door through which they entered; it is still cracked open. Two escape, but the Roman and his confederates cut down two others as they try to squeeze out.

Followed by Joe, who clambers over the bodies and limps crookedly through the door and into the night.

“Joe, come! Come!”

Outside, the Roman scans the dark barrio with his pistol raised, trying to watch the cars and the houses and the buildings and the street, trying to keep from getting shot, trying to see his wounded dog. The Sinaloans have apparently taken off. Two boys run down Coahuila Street, oversized athletic shoes splashing potholes filled with rain. Sirens wail and citizens stoically observe the Roman from behind windows and cracked doors. They’ve seen this before—their city among the most violent cities in a violent country in a violent world.

The Roman calls out to them in anguished Spanish: “Where is my dog? Where is my dog?”

No one answers.

“Joe! Here, boy! Come!”

The Roman searches the sidewalks and beneath cars, under the festive furniture on the porches and the tiny front yards, even the gutters running black and throwing up wakes over pale sandbags that just maybe could be Joe.

The sirens force him away.

He’s the last to pile into the white-and-green van parked on a side street. It’s the one with the Ciudad de Tijuana Policía Municipal emblems on the sides and the orange light on the top and the three green cartridge cases on the floor beside the badly wounded Domingo. The driver runs the wet city streets fast, no warning light and no siren. Just the high beams. And the stink of blood and fear and gun smoke, and the pounding of the Roman’s heart.

Five minutes later the van pulls into Superior Automobile Repair and Service, and the motorized wrought iron gate with the big sign on it rolls closed behind them. The compound is surrounded by an impregnable ten-foot concrete wall with broken bottles cemented to the top. A man in street clothes waves the driver in to the high bay and the repair stations inside.

Domingo has died, so the others climb over him and out. The Roman is first among them, carrying one of the three ammunition cases, his pay for the night’s work. He loves the feel of $28,880 in his hand, but his heart aches with the loss of Joe.

Another man in street clothes walks the Roman to his car.

“It is terrible what happened, Señor Román.”

The Roman has rehearsed a lifetime for what just happened. Which prepared him poorly for it. He’s killed three men just now. His first, not counting war. He feels gutted and surprised.

“Fuck off, Amador.”

The Roman’s car is a green Maserati Quattroporte parked over a platform jack in one of the repair stations, as if to be worked on first thing in the morning. The Roman sets the ammo case in the trunk and tosses the ski mask beside it. Runs his hands through his short blond hair.

Behind the wheel now, he nods to the man, who throws a toggle on a cabled control box. The platform jack shudders and lowers the Maserati into the ground. The Roman looks at himself briefly in the rearview as the darkness claims him, blame and anger in his bloodshot gray eyes. Blame and anger. He thinks: Joe. I’d go back and look for him if la colonia wasn’t crawling with cops, some on cartel payrolls but some not.

Five minutes and a slow mile through the dark underground tunnel later, the green Maserati rises from its grave, safe within the high spiked walls of Platinum Foreign Car Specialists in Otay Mesa, California.

The Roman waits as the gate swings open, then drives through it into the California night.


Click below to pre-order your copy of The Rescue, coming April 25th, 2023!

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of amazon -71

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of bn- 67

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of booksamillion- 27

opens in a new windowibooks2 8

opens in a new windowindiebound

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of bookshop- 80

post-featured-image

What’s New from Forge this Winter

A new year is upon us, which means a slew of new books are arriving on the scene from Forge! We’re so excited to share the lineup of amazing books we have coming your way this winter. If you’re on the hunt for some books to curl up with during these chillier months of the year, take a look at what Forge has in store for you!


Cutthroat Dogs by Loren D. Estleman

Image Placeholder of - 22“Someone is dead who shouldn’t be, and the wrong man is in prison.”

Nearly twenty years ago, college freshman April Goss was found dead in her bathtub, an apparent suicide, but suspicion soon fell on her boyfriend. Dan Corbeil was convicted of her murder and sent to prison. Case closed.

Or is it?

Available to read now!

A Thousand Steps by T. Jefferson Parker

A Thousand Steps-1Laguna Beach, California, 1968. The Age of Aquarius is in full swing. Timothy Leary is a rock star. LSD is God. Folks from all over are flocking to Laguna, seeking peace, love, and enlightenment.

Matt Anthony is just trying get by.

Matt is sixteen, broke, and never sure where his next meal is coming from. Mom’s a stoner, his deadbeat dad is a no-show, his brother’s fighting in Nam . . . and his big sister Jazz has just gone missing. The cops figure she’s just another runaway hippie chick, enjoying a summer of love, but Matt doesn’t believe it. Not after another missing girl turns up dead on the beach.

All Matt really wants to do is get his driver’s license and ask out the girl he’s been crushing on since fourth grade, yet it’s up to him to find his sister. But in a town where the cops don’t trust the hippies and the hippies don’t trust the cops, uncovering what’s really happened to Jazz is going to force him to grow up fast.

If it’s not already too late.

Available to read now!

Margaret Truman’s Murder at the CDC by Margaret Truman and Jon Land

Margaret Truman's Murder at the CDC2017: A military transport on a secret run to dispose of its deadly contents vanishes without a trace.

The present: A mass shooting on the steps of the Capitol nearly claims the life of Robert Brixton’s grandson.

No stranger to high-stakes investigations, Brixton embarks on a trail to uncover the motive behind the shooting. On the way he finds himself probing the attempted murder of the daughter of his best friend, who works at the Washington offices of the CDC.

The connection between the mass shooting and Alexandra’s poisoning lies in that long-lost military transport that has been recovered by forces determined to change America forever. Those forces are led by radical separatist leader Deacon Frank Wilhyte, whose goal is nothing short of bringing on a second Civil War.

Brixton joins forces with Kelly Lofton, a former Baltimore homicide detective. She has her own reasons for wanting to find the truth behind the shooting on the Capitol steps, and is the only person with the direct knowledge Brixton needs. But chasing the truth places them in the cross-hairs of both Wilhyte’s legions and his Washington enablers.

Coming 2.15.22!

The Chase by Candice Fox

The Chase

“Are you listening, Warden?”

“What do you want?”

“I want you to let them out.”

“Which inmates are we talking about?”

“All of them.”

With that, the largest manhunt in United States history is on. In response to a hostage situation, more than 600 inmates from the Pronghorn Correctional Facility, including everyone on Death Row, are released into the Nevada Desert. Criminals considered the worst of the worst, monsters with dark, violent pasts, are getting farther away by the second.

John Kradle, convicted of murdering his wife and son, is one of the escapees. Now, desperate to discover what really happened that night, Kradle must avoid capture and work quickly to prove his innocence as law enforcement closes in on the fugitives.

Death Row Supervisor, and now fugitive-hunter, Celine Osbourne has focused all of her energy on catching Kradle and bringing him back to Death Row. She has very personal reasons for hating him – and she knows exactly where he’s heading…

Coming 3.8.22!

Assassin’s Edge by Ward Larsen

image alt textA U.S. spy plane crashes off the northern coast of Russia at the same time that a Mossad operative is abducted from a street in Kazakhstan. The two events seem unrelated, but as suspicions rise, the CIA calls in its premier operative, David Slaton.

When wreckage from the aircraft is discovered on a remote Arctic island, Slaton and a team are sent on a clandestine mission to investigate. While they comb a frigid Russian island at the top of the world, disaster strikes yet again: a U.S. Navy destroyer sinks in the Black Sea.

Evidence begins mounting that these disparate events are linked, controlled by an unseen hand. A mysterious source, code name Lazarus, provides tantalizing clues about another impending strike. Yet Lazarus has an agenda that is deeply personal, a thirst for revenge against a handful of clandestine operators. Prime among them: David Slaton.

Coming 4.12.22!

Traitor by David Hagberg

image alt text1When McGarvey’s best friend, Otto, is charged with treason, Mac and his wife, Petey, set out on a desperate odyssey to clear Otto’s name. Crossing oceans and continents, their journey will take them from Japan to the US to Pakistan to Russia. Caught in a Kremlin crossfire between two warring intel agencies, Mac and Petey must fight for their lives every step of the way.

And the stakes could not be higher.

Coming 4.26.22!

And here are some great books coming out in trade paperback!

Waiting for the Night Song by Julie Carrick Dalton

Waiting for the Night Song-1Cadie Kessler has spent decades trying to cover up one truth. One moment. But deep down, didn’t she always know her secret would surface?

An urgent message from her long-estranged best friend Daniela Garcia brings Cadie, now a forestry researcher, back to her childhood home. There, Cadie and Daniela are forced to face a dark secret that ended both their idyllic childhood bond and the magical summer that takes up more space in Cadie’s memory then all her other years combined.

Now grown up, bound by long-held oaths, and faced with truths she does not wish to see, Cadie must decide what she is willing to sacrifice to protect the people and the forest she loves, as drought, foreclosures, and wildfire spark tensions between displaced migrant farm workers and locals.

Waiting for the Night Song is a love song to the natural beauty around us, a call to fight for what we believe in, and a reminder that the truth will always rise.

Available to read now! Reading group guide also available.

My Brilliant Life by Ae-ran Kim; translated by Chi-Young Kim

My Brilliant Life-1Areum lives life to its fullest, vicariously through the stories of his parents, conversations with Little Grandpa Jang—his sixty-year-old neighbor and best friend—and through the books he reads to visit the places he would otherwise never see.

For several months, Areum has been working on a manuscript, piecing together his parents’ often embellished stories about his family and childhood. He hopes to present it on his birthday, as a final gift to his mom and dad; their own falling-in-love story.

Through it all, Areum and his family will have you laughing and crying, for all the right reasons.

Coming 2.1.22! Reading group guide also available.

Her Perfect Life by Hank Phillippi Ryan

Her Perfect Life-1Everyone knows Lily Atwood—and that may be her biggest problem. The beloved television reporter has it all—fame, fortune, Emmys, an adorable seven-year-old daughter, and the hashtag her loving fans created: #PerfectLily. To keep it, all she has to do is protect one life-changing secret.

Her own.

Lily has an anonymous source who feeds her story tips—but suddenly, the source begins telling Lily inside information about her own life. How does he—or she—know the truth?

Lily understands that no one reveals a secret unless they have a reason. Now she’s terrified someone is determined to destroy her world—and with it, everyone and everything she holds dear.

How much will she risk to keep her perfect life?

Coming 3.8.22! Reading group guide also available.

The Lights of Sugarberry Cove by Heather Webber

The Lights of Sugarberry Cove-1Sadie Way Scott has been avoiding her family and hometown of Sugarberry Cove, Alabama, since she nearly drowned in the lake just outside her mother’s B&B. Eight years later, Sadie is the host of a much-loved show about southern cooking and family, but despite her success, she wonders why she was saved. What is she supposed to do?

Sadie’s sister, Leala Clare, is still haunted by the guilt she feels over the night her sister almost died. Now, at a crossroads in her marriage, Leala has everything she ever thought she wanted—so why is she so unhappy?

When their mother suffers a minor heart attack just before Sugarberry Cove’s famous water lantern festival, the two sisters come home to run the inn while she recovers. It’s the last place either of them wants to be, but with a little help from the inn’s quirky guests, the sisters may come to terms with their strained relationships, accept the past, and rediscover a little lake magic.

Coming 3.1.22! Reading group guide also available.

The Widow Queen by Elzbieta Cherezinska

The Widow QueenThe bold one, they call her—too bold for most.

To her father, the great duke of Poland, Swietoslawa and her two sisters represent three chances for an alliance. Three marriages on which to build his empire.

But Swietoslawa refuses to be simply a pawn in her father’s schemes; she seeks a throne of her own, with no husband by her side.

The gods may grant her wish, but crowns sit heavy, and power is a sword that cuts both ways.

Coming 3.15.22! Reading group guide also available.

Comes the War by Ed Ruggero

Comes the War-1April 1944, the fifty-fifth month of the war in Europe. The entire island of Britain fairly buzzes with the coiled energy of a million men poised to leap the Channel to France, the first, riskiest step in the Allies’ long slog to the heart of Germany and the end of the war.

Lieutenant Eddie Harkins is tasked to investigate the murder of Helen Batcheller, an OSS analyst. Harkins is assigned a British driver, Private Pamela Lowell, to aid in his investigation. Lowell is smart, brave and resourceful; like Harkins, she is prone to speak her mind even when it doesn’t help her.

Soon a suspect is arrested and Harkins is ordered to stop digging. Suspicious, he continues his investigation only to find himself trapped in a web of Soviet secrets. As bombs fall, Harkins must solve the murder and reveal the spies before it is too late.

Coming 3.29.22!

A Dog’s Courage by W. Bruce Cameron

A Dog's CourageBella was once a lost dog, but now she lives happily with her people, Lucas and Olivia, only occasionally recalling the hardships in her past. Then a weekend camping trip turns into a harrowing struggle for survival when the Rocky Mountains are engulfed by the biggest wildfire in American history. The raging inferno separates Bella from her people and she is lost once more.

Alone in the wilderness, Bella unexpectedly finds herself responsible for the safety of two defenseless mountain lion cubs. Now she’s torn between two equally urgent goals. More than anything, she wants to find her way home to Lucas and Olivia, but not if it means abandoning her new family to danger. And danger abounds, from predators hunting them to the flames threatening at every turn.

Can Bella ever get back to where she truly belongs?

A Dog’s Courage is more than a fast-paced adventure, more than a devoted dog’s struggle to survive, it’s a story asking that we believe in our dogs as much as they believe in us.

Coming 4.5.22!

post-featured-image

The Music Behind A Thousand Steps by T. Jefferson Parker

A Thousand StepsSet in Laguna Beach, 1968, T. Jefferson Parker’s A Thousand Steps takes you right back to the Age of Aquarius. No trip to the 60’s is complete without a killer soundtrack. T. Jefferson Parker has given us the perfect playlist to accompany A Thousand Steps and some memories to go with it!


By T. Jefferson Parker

Here’s my personal playlist from 1968.  I still love these songs and play them often.  Sometimes for real, and other times they just drift through my mind like butterflies from the past…

video soruce

  •  Sunshine of Your Love by Cream

This was my personal favorite song in 1968.  I saved up $2.99 from my allowance to get it on a stereo vinyl album of “Disraeli Gears” at the Sound Spectrum in Laguna Beach.

  •  All Along the Watchtower by Bob Dylan
  •  I’m Looking Through You by the Beatles

This song still plays in my mind, unexpectedly, beautifully, for no apparent reason. 

  •  California Dreaming by the Mamas and the Papas 
  •  For What it’s Worth by Buffalo Springfield

This iconic 1966 song reminds me so much of 2020 and 2021, with the protests and the shootings and the strife on the streets of the U.S. To me the song is haunting and prophetic.

  •  White Rabbit by Jefferson Airplane

I always liked this song, and the name of the band, too!

  •  Tales of Brave Ulysses by Cream

In the novel A Thousand Steps, this dreamy, hard-driving adventure song is protagonist Matt Anthony’s personal favorite.  The song reminds me of Matt, on a journey into manhood that feels like Odysseus battling monsters to return home…

  •  Satisfaction by the Rolling Stones

My band lip-synched this song in an assembly in 1966.  I was in the sixth grade, and played drums on a drum set I made out of cardboard!

  •  Good Vibrations by the Beach Boys 
  •  Little Wing by Jimi Hendrix

This wrenchingly poignant song is featured in A Thousand Steps, in the form of a paper airplane that becomes one of the clues to the mystery at the heart of the novel.

  •  Suzanne by Leonard Cohen

How different, how cool!

  •  Respect by Aretha Franklin

Matt’s beloved sister, Jasmine, gets an Aretha 45 rpm single for her birthday in A Thousand Steps.

  •  Subterranean Homesick Blues by Bob Dylan
  •  Yellow Submarine by the Beatles

I loved this goofy song as a kid, especially Ringo’s droll vocals. 

  •  Mr. Tambourine Man by Bob Dylan

I love this song so much.  When I first heard it I thought Dylan had written just for me!

  •  Foxey Lady by Jimi Hendrix

This song is featured in A Thousand Steps, playing on the ocean breeze as Matt descends the steep concrete stairway to 1,000 Steps Beach in Laguna for the first time, in search of his vanished sister…

 Order your copy of A Thousand Steps here!

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of amazon- 64

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of bn -22

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of booksamillion -95

opens in a new windowibooks2 47

opens in a new windowindiebound

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of bookshop- 19

post-featured-image

The Coolest Laguna Beach Locations in A Thousand Steps by T. Jefferson Parker

A Thousand Steps by T. Jefferson Parker is set in Laguna Beach, California in 1968 and Matt Anthony, the main character, lives and visits other real and iconic locations in southern California. When Matt’s sister Jazz goes missing, and the police have prioritized drug busts over finding her, he takes it upon himself to look all over the city for her – in places such as Mystic Arts World, Top of the World, and of course, the Thousand Steps Beach.

Top of the World Neighborhood

Placeholder of  -76

One of the first locations Matt looks for Jazz after she goes missing is the Top of the World. The neighborhood is full of the elite with their fancy houses – and Matt heard that Jazz went to one of the parties in Top of the World shortly before she disappeared.

Dodge City

Image Place holder  of - 55

At one point in the story, Matt’s mom Julie gets a new job and moves her and Matt to Dodge City. The housing is included with her new tomato canning job, but Dodge City is full of some of the biggest and hardest drug users in Laguna Beach.

Mystic Arts World

Place holder  of - 69

Before Jazz vanished, she worked part time at Mystic Arts World, delivering packages to their customers. In a grab for money and a way to live independently from his mother, Matt agrees to also run packages such as copies of The Tibetan Book of the Dead.

 

Pacific Coast Highway

Poster Placeholder of - 27

In Matt’s quest to find Jazz, he borrows her car and drives all around the places she’s been to around the city on the Pacific Coast Highway. He also drives the highway on the way to dates, adventures, and to the iconic Thousand Steps Beach.

Thousand Steps Beach

Image Placeholder of - 34

And of course, Matt visits the Thousand Steps Beach. The can be accessed by walking down 218 steps (not actually a thousand). The steps are also a regular location for photographers to take photos of models, and it’s from one of the regular models (who Matt befriends) that Matt learns Jazz had modeled there recently.

Pre-order a copy of A Thousand Steps—available January 11th, 2022!

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of amazon- 63

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of bn- 32

opens in a new windowPlaceholder of booksamillion -2

opens in a new windowibooks2 6

opens in a new windowindiebound

opens in a new windowImage Placeholder of bookshop- 4

post-featured-image

Download a Free Digital Preview of A Thousand Steps!

opens in a new windowPoster Placeholder of - 53Start reading T. Jefferson Parker’s novel A Thousand Steps with a free digital preview! A Thousand Steps will be available January 11, 2022.

About opens in a new windowA Thousand Steps:

Laguna Beach, California, 1968. The Age of Aquarius is in full swing. Timothy Leary is a rock star. LSD is God. Folks from all over are flocking to Laguna, seeking peace, love, and enlightenment.

Matt Anthony is just trying get by.

Matt is sixteen, broke, and never sure where his next meal is coming from. Mom’s a stoner, his deadbeat dad is a no-show, his brother’s fighting in Nam . . . and his big sister Jazz has just gone missing. The cops figure she’s just another runaway hippie chick, enjoying a summer of love, but Matt doesn’t believe it. Not after another missing girl turns up dead on the beach.

All Matt really wants to do is get his driver’s license and ask out the girl he’s been crushing on since fourth grade, yet it’s up to him to find his sister. But in a town where the cops don’t trust the hippies and the hippies don’t trust the cops, uncovering what’s really happened to Jazz is going to force him to grow up fast.

If it’s not already too late.

Download Your Free Digital Preview:

opens in a new windowkindle

opens in a new windownook

opens in a new windowebooks.com

opens in a new windowImage Place holder  of google play- 73

opens in a new windowibooks2 28

opens in a new windowkobo

The owner of this website has made a commitment to accessibility and inclusion, please report any problems that you encounter using the contact form on this website. This site uses the WP ADA Compliance Check plugin to enhance accessibility.