Sean O’Brien series by Tom Lowe
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Tom Lowe | English | ePUB | Size: 5.3 MiB | 8 Books
Mystery & Thrillers
I began my own journey working many jobs, as countless people do. I worked in factories, restaurants, bars and boatyards. I worked for small and large companies. Disney was the largest. All along, I wrote freelance magazine and newspaper pieces. Eventually I became a fulltime journalist, working in newspapers and television. I wrote and produced long-form documentaries for PBS.
The Author
The many years as a journalist were a good way for me to sharpen my oyster knife, looking to string a few pearls together. The time and opportunity gave me access into the human condition. It allowed me to witness the worst and best in people. To try to put it in some kind of written or visual perspective that followed the “what, where, how, and when,” and most importantly, the “why.” The profession gave me the opportunity and incentive to dig deeper into my own core.
In the meantime, I moved my storytelling from non-fiction into fiction, into the novel. The Sean O’Brien series, using Florida as a “character,” gives me the opportunity to draw from the deep well of the human condition to fictionalize actual subject matter that I hope will interest you.
The Books
Sean O’Brien’s lifestyle seems at first glance to be the envy of us all. Though barely on the shady side of 40, he has a riverfront cabin home on one of Florida’s (and America’s) signature wilderness waterways, the Saint John’s River. He is also proud possessor of a cabin cruiser birthed practically in the shadow of Ponce Inlet lighthouse. And if that isn’t enough, he has chick-magnet charisma, but he prefers as a companion a gator-bait dachshund by the name of Max. O’Brien is not a moneyed ne’er-do-well. He is instead a widower and a “retired” Miami homicide detective, and, according to Volusia County sheriff’s investigator, he’s a good prospect to take the fall for a string of sex murders, a situation that forces him back to crime solving. Though a bit light on the reality quotient here and there, A False Dawn makes good reading for anyone longing to stumble upon an unpublished John D. MacDonald Florida mystery.
This isn’t quite that, but it will do nicely.
The books in suggested reading order
A False Dawn
The 24th Letter
The Butterfly Forest
The Black Bullet
Blood of Cain
Black River
Cemetery Road
A Murder of Crows
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