Dan Henry is an average writer, but marketing isn't exactly his thing. He just needs a little luck to write a killer novel that people want to read.
That's when Pastor Janet Russell reaches out with a proposition. She has the confessions told by a dying homeless woman who claimed to have killed eight people. The details are all there, the "when," "why," and "how" out each crime. The homeless woman challenged the pastor to recount each story to a writer who would report her confession to the police.
It's Dan's job to document each incident, get the police involved, and help the families find closure. Each incident is to be a separate chapter in the book.
Dan agrees to the task-and so do the police.
The police are doubtful at first. They soon take a special interest when the details of the murders check out. Soon the FBI gets involved as each crime takes place in a different state.
Everything seems to be coming together-except the profile of perpetrator is not matching the homeless woman-not exactly. Is the homeless woman really the killer?
Find out in The Detectives, a suspenseful page-turner by Dennis Wesley Clark.
About the Author: Author Dennis Wesley Clark grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area, boating in the bay and hiking in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. Later he lived in Costa Rica, Honduras, and Venezuela.
Clark served in the army as an artillery staff sergeant in Vietnam stationed along the DMZ, then later as a tactical combat advisor.
After earning a degree in finance, he became a consultant in the aerospace and defense industry at various locations in the United States and England, specializing in fixing "broken operations" and later consulting.
These combined educational, military, and business experiences provided him a unique view of various peoples and living conditions. Now, as a novelist, he takes these vast experiences and crafts stories that will tantalize readers with intrigue, suspense, and action.