This suspense-thriller highlights, in psychological terms, theory of mind, which refers to the capacity of one to understand that other people like oneself can conceal their beliefs, desires, intentions, emotions and thoughts; making liars of us all, especially in this story. Lies that may have false accused a father of two of murder, which leads to his incarceration.
     Jake says he's innocent of the gravamen, and his appeals look promising, but in the court of public opinion he's a murderer deserving of the death penalty.
     The past, in a series of flashbacks over a decade, gets a second look by law enforcement, appellate courts and lawyers, including Jake's children Chase and Summer. who don't disagree on much, save for their father being a murderer.  Herefrom amid the lies, the truth is revealed.
     This detailed, fast-paced, action-packed crime novel leaves no stone unturned; even if that stone rests covered in blood by a shattered cellphone within an escarpment.  A graphic story that turns "The Who Done It" on its head, because when the damage has been done, the ripple effect of The Who is not as important as The Why, and it's Chase, by his calculations, that makes 1+1=3. As in the three murdered, he knows why they were. The secret's out.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                  A prelude to Poet's next novel, a Sci-Fi suspense-thriller, entitled "Endlings, Part 1: Iam Newman," it reads like nothing Poet Suigeneris has ever written before, as he takes on politics, science and World War III with the fallout of a nuclear holocaust; a page-turner must-read due out in the Spring of 2026.

 


Sorry, our MetaPoetica Tees

 Out-of-Stock!!!