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Cheap (Inexpensive) Reads > Nothing Happens All the Time

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Edmund Mahon (edmund_mahon) | 5 comments Nothing Happens All the Time: Homicides Truly Know How to Interrupt a Good Meal! by Edmund Mahon

A book definitely looking for readers to enjoy, laugh, and cry... among other things. A good mystery, whodunit, detective novel with glimmers of science fiction wrapped around by a causational flow of energy to help keep the story moving from start to finish. Sprinkled with highlights of a touch of romance.

Available on Amazon: $0.99 for the eBook $18.00 for the book, which gives you the eBook for free when you order the book.

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If inclined, leave a review.

The setting of the book is based in the future sixty years from the publishing of this book. Most of the characters work in the detective bureau in Boston PD, with other characters outside of the division sprinkled in to provide the variety of life necessary to keep things interesting as needed. Given the storyline is in the future, naturally there are going to be elements of possible future tech involved in the equation.

Growing With the Flow...

Detective Eli Mitchell enjoyed working the cases that landed on his desk, regardless of who they involved and the implications of the crimes tying them to the investigation. He loved his job and the Boston metropolis certainly had its fair share of incidents to keep the job interesting, outside of the so-called daily routine stigma that's been the cause of career burnout in far too many good officers. An occupational hazard that came with the job whether it was recognized as such or not.

How could Detective Mitchell possibly know that his next big case, a homicide at one of the local convenience stores, was going to set events in motion over the next twelve days that would completely change every aspect of his life? Events that would soon turn his world upside down and inside out beyond the limits of the surreal, regardless of any departmental training, on the job or life experience, and even his own understanding of being.

It's a damn good thing for him that he has coffee.


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