Indie April Suggestions – Part 5

Caleb Pirtle III

When I was growing up, if you wanted to become a fiction author, you wrote books and submitted them to book publishers. You could write short stories, but the magazine market had dwindled to such a point that the paying markets were just about impossible to break into. Which left you with a variety of fanzines that paid in contributor copies. If you were lucky.

Back in the 60s, 70s, 80s, and 90s things were pretty tough for those wanting to be a published author — especially an author of fiction. The Indie Movement is a tsunami of fresh air.

Caleb Pirtle III entered the world of writing, back in that pre-internet era, through the nonfiction side. He was a journalist, authored a variety of nonfiction books, was travel editor for Southern Living magazine, and editorial director for a custom book and magazine publishing company.

Moving into the fiction, he wrote screenplays, and today focuses on historical fiction, with a side of spy and psychological thrillers.

I’ve only read a smidgen of his 70+ published books. But that smidgen has been a gold mine. A literary El Dorado.

I’m very pleased to have discovered the many worlds Caleb Pirtle — and look forward to discovering many more!

The Quiet Assassin

Roland Sand is The Quiet Assassin and is the main character in three longish spy thriller novellas.

I suggest getting the one volume edition and read the stories one after the other, because the collection reads like a novel when read that way.

Sand was my introduction to Mr. Pirtle’s fiction, and I fell in love immediately. The writing is pictorially evocative. Pirtle wields words and sentences like an artist does a paintbrush. The characters are well-drawn, and you find yourself wondering where you’ve met them before. They are that real.

When I finished Lonely Night To Die, quite honestly I was sad. Sad because there were no more stories to read.

Pick up a copy of Lonely Night To Die at Amazon. You won’t be sorry.

The Boom Town Saga

Caleb has a time machine. I just know he does, because when I read the three books in The Boom Town Saga I was transported back to East Texas in the 1930s.

I could taste the dust, feel the sweat-producing humidity. I could reach out and touch the people of Ashland. I fell in love with Eudora Durant. And con artist though he is, I felt I could be friends with Doc Bannister.

The three books in The Boom Town Saga are three must reads. They will give you an understanding of Depression Era Texas that no text book will give you. And I think that’s because they are time machines. They’re also doggone good entertainment.

Get The Boom Town Saga at Amazon. You won’t be sorry. It’s some of the best reading I’ve experienced.

Last Deadly Lie

I am going to cheat, and quote my review from Amazon:

Last Deadly Lie is a powerful novel of greed, the lust for power, the desperate grasp for meaning and purpose, and of human depravity. The book is a starkly realistic portrayal of church people, small town people, all people. We all have our secrets. Secrets we will do anything to keep secret, and that is what gives this novel its power.

Caleb Pirtle’s strength as a fiction writer lies in his ability to put realistic characters on the page, and his ability to vividly paint a scene so that you can see, touch, and experience it right along with the characters. And to top it off, his prose sings.

Last Deadly Lie just might be the best novel I’ll read all year. Highly recommended.

What can I say? Stop what you’re doing and get this book right now! 🙂

Caleb Pirtle III is one of the very best writers to join the Indie Movement from traditional publishing. He is a fabulous craftsman, and I am looking forward to reading more of his wonderfully satisfying stories. Do give him a try, if you haven’t already. He’s magnificent.

Comments are always welcome. And until next time, happy reading!

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And, Yes, Yet More Suggested Reads

Below are 5 more suggested reads, just in case you still have no idea what to read next. There are so very many excellent books out there. And so very many adventures we can get in on, just by riding our armchairs!

The Stone Seekers by Jack Tyler

Jack Tyler is one of those writers who just doesn’t write fast enough for me. Doggone it. Nor is he a prolific writer. Double doggone it. He has but four books published and a short story in an anthology. I own them all.

My favorite is his epic fantasy novel The Stone Seekers. It is refreshingly different. No Tolkien pastiche here! And like any epic fantasy novel, it has a quest, high adventure, and larger than life villains. What makes this novel memorable, is the world building and the superb storytelling.

Tyler gives you a good story. A story that will take you places you’ve never been, with fascinating travel companions.

Get this book. Heck, get all of his books. They’re worth it.

Daguerreotype by Ray Zacek

I do not remember when I ran into Ray Zacek. Most likely it was on Twitter or Facebook. I do not know him even though we follow each other on Twitter and are friends on Facebook. We’ve never chatted.

However, what I do know is this: he is one heck of a good writer. I don’t own all of his work — yet. But I’m working on it. He’s that good.

He writes horror, sci-fi, dark comedy, humor, crime, and satire. And it’s all superb.

Daguerreotype is a tale of terror. A tale about greed and its unfortunate consequences. And like all of the Zacek stories I’ve read, it’s riveting.

Very highly recommended.

The Peach Widow by Zara Altair

Zara Altair writes historical mysteries set in Ostrogoth Italy after the fall of Rome. Her sleuth, Argolicus (who was a real person, by the way), is a retired civil servant with a knack for solving murders in a time and place where murder wasn’t a crime!

The Argolicus series of four (and counting) mysteries is well worth your time. A good way to pass a lazy afternoon, or the ride on the bus or train to work.

The research and storytelling bring this little known era to life.

So if you like history, or want to learn some history, and have fun doing so, and like mystery, then pick up these time machines and step into another world.

Good stuff be here!

Off Grid by Simon Osborne

To my knowledge, this is Mr Osborne’s sole offering — and it’s a good one.

Not quite a post-apocalyptic cozy catastrophe, it’s still close enough to get my attention.

Aliens come to earth and take over. The humans that remain are being hunted to extinction. And the pockets of survivors that remain are doing their best to avoid their decreed fate.

The story focuses on truck driver Harry Lennard and his quest to stay off grid, thereby avoiding the aliens, and to try and make a life for himself minus his family, who appear to have been killed in the attack.

The book is told well. Mr Osborne is a natural storyteller.

If post-apocalyptic fiction is your thing, Off Grid is definitely for you. If you like a tale of survival and adventure, then you’ve found your cup of tea in Off Grid. Good reading be here!

A Very English Mystery series by Elizabeth Edmondson

I am a committed indie author/publisher and a dedicated indie author reader. In fact, as a writer, I’m anti-traditional publishing. As a reviewer, I rarely review traditionally published books. As a reader, I very rarely buy new traditionally published books. I will buy them used.

However, the late Elizabeth Edmondson so impressed me with her Very English Mystery series, that even though it’s published by Amazon’s Thomas & Mercer imprint, I though I’d give it a shoutout here.

There are actually four books in the series. The novella, A Youthful Indiscretion, fits into the series between books one and two.

I grew up in the Cold War. The 1950s (the time period of the books) was a time when we tried to carry on life as normal, even though there was the underlying fear an atom bomb was going to blast us into oblivion.

Ozzie and Harriet were on TV, while we practiced hiding under our desks at school and read our civil defense manuals on how to build and stock a bomb shelter in the basement. The Red threat was on everyone’s mind, and we chanted Better Dead than Red.

Ms Edmondson captured the era perfectly in her books.

The series revolves around Hugo and Freya and their involvement with murder in the town of Selchester.

The atmosphere is much like an Agatha Christie or Patricia Wentworth novel, and packs the punch of a good spy thriller.

An excellent series. One well worth your time and money.

Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!

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