Little Boy Gone


Book Description

A nurse takes her young patient for a walk early one morning and has a heart attack. A child abduction ring has been trolling the area and finds the small boy crying in his stroller. They grab him. He is just what they have been looking for. He is blond, blue-eyed, and young. Only he is a lot more than they bargained for. The child is very ill. The woman chosen by the ring to take care of the child falls in love with him, and she kidnaps the child from the abductors. The child's family is looking for him. A task force is set up. The abduction ring is desperately searching for the child. Hopefully, before he becomes seriously ill, or worse, and this toddler will be safely returned to his family




Little Boy, Gone


Book Description

Pre-order the next gripping psych thriller from bestselling author J A Baker Every parent's worst nightmare... When five-year-old Leo disappears after leaving school, it sets a chain of events in motion that will change the lives of the local residents forever. Ashton committed a terrible crime as a child, but he’s determined to put the past behind him and build a new life for himself – where no one knows his dark secrets. But Lynda, a stern secondary school teacher, recognises the troubled boy from all those years ago, bringing him the unwelcome attention he fears. Sarah, a bored housewife and vicious gossip, hears about Ashton’s past and convinces herself he is responsible for Leo’s disappearance. And meanwhile Leo remains missing. Gone without a trace... But just who took Leo and why? And will he be found before it’s too late? Please note: This book is re-issue of Looking For Leo by J A Baker Readers LOVE JA Baker! 'Engaging characters, a chilling tale - Baker at her best!' Bestselling author Valerie Keogh 'A dark and twisting thrill ride that asks the question: how well do you really know your parents? It kept me hooked until the final page!' Bestselling author M.A. Hunter 'A dark and twisty thriller that keep you guessing at the truth, The Perfect Parents is an addictive read!' Bestselling author Alison Stockham 'This captivating pacy thriller sucks you in from the first page and spits you out at the last!' Bestselling author Ruby Speechley




Gone Boy


Book Description

"A father's search for the truth in his son's murder. ... a murderous and cunning inquiry into guns, violence, and manhood in America."--Jacket.




Good Boy Gone Bad


Book Description

This book is the first of five about growing up in Oakland California and in the swamps in New Orleans in the mid seventies and eighties. It is loosely based on my experiences and the things I witnessed as a child and later as a man. Ghetto life is real, Murder for profit, Drug Dealers, Pimps , Murder for hire, Sex, Drug Addiction, mine and others; Child Molestation, Illegal Dog fights, Gambling, Prostitution and my ultimate incarceration. A little bit of everything. With permission from the streets given, there will be many more stories depicting life on the streets from the people who lived it and died for it. Im writing from prison and trying to get a publishing deal. Its past time for a REAL Bay Area writer from the REAL streets to tell it like it is.




One Boy Missing


Book Description

It was a butcher on smoko who reported the man stashing the kid in the car boot. He didn't really know whether he'd seen anything at all, though. Maybe an abduction? Maybe just a stressed-out father. Detective Bart Moy, newly returned to the country town where his ailing, cantankerous father still lives, finds nothing. As far as he can tell no one in Guilderton is missing a small boy. Still, he looks deeper into the butcher's story - after all, he had a son of his own once. But when the boy does turn up, silent, apparently traumatised, things are no clearer. Who is he? Where did he come from and what happened to him? For Moy, gaining the boy's trust becomes central not just to the case but to rebuilding his own life. From the wreckage of his grief, his dead marriage and his fractured relationship with his father may yet come a chance for something new. A mystery, a meditation on fatherhood, a harrowing examination of love and loss: a new departure in literary crime from Stephen Orr. Stephen Orr is the author of several published works of fiction and non-fiction. His novel Time's Long Ruin was shortlisted for the Commonwealth Writers' Prize and longlisted for the Miles Franklin Award in 2011. He lives in Adelaide. 'A study in character, masculinity, and specifically the relationships between fathers and sons...deftly written.' Australian Book Review 'In One Boy Missing, [Orr] realises the slow rhythms of country Australia, its language and landscape...skilfully...It is great holiday reading, whether at home or abroad.' Australian Bookseller and Publisher 'Orr creates an evocative landscape, the characterisations are truly wonderful, and because of that, the resolution of the crime at the heart of the novel is less important than seeing how these three can find some kind of peace with who they are and what life has done to them.' Hoopla '[Stephen Orr] is adept at partnering highly charged associations with emotionally arid landscapes.' Adelaide Advertiser 'The novel is not so much a typical crime novel but a more contemplative exploration of the relationship between fathers and sons. Stephen Orr spends time drawing out his characters; foibles and the novel is all the better for his attention.' Sun Herald 'Two of Orr's novels are complex variations on the themes of loss, isolation, the difficulties of putting a self back together. His prose is measured and eloquent, his imaginative reach considerable, and his next novel worth the wait.' Sydney Morning Herald/Age 'Stephen Orr's detective is sunnier than Kurt Wallander, but his talkative characters and bitter realism stands comparison with Henning Mankell. He's a sincere storyteller with a flinty eye for the landscape and the sadness that drives good stories forward.' Dominion Post/Waikato Times/Weekend Press 'Stephen Orr spends time drawing out his characters' foibles and the novel is all the better for his attentions.' Sunday Examiner A study in character, masculinity, and specifically the relationships between fathers and sons...deftly written.’ Australian Book Review ‘A sensitive and sometimes-moving look at a man drowning in the sorrows of his past, with a prickly relationship with his father and with a child who desperately needs to trust someone...A sweetly told tale of fatherhood and loss.’ Kirkus




Bad Boy Gone Good


Book Description

Mix a bad boy who wants to fix his reputation with a good girl who can’t resist her brother’s best friend and you get Katie Frey’s newest romance in the Hartmann Heirs series! When a reformed bad boy meets a consummate good girl… Despite his millions, August Quaid still hasn’t shaken his reputation as the bad boy of Bozeman, even though he’s learning the ranching business from the wealthy Hartmann family. But with the return of Hartmann twin Evie, all of August’s good intentions are going to hell. His best friend’s little sister is now a stunning, too-tempting Hollywood actress looking to lose her virginity—to him! An innocent game has taken a wicked turn. August has two truths: he wants Evie and she definitely wants him. And his lie? That he can resist her… Harlequin Desire transports you to the luxurious worlds of American tycoons, ranchers and family dynasties. Get ready for bold encounters and sizzling chemistry. You’ll be swept away by this bold, sizzling romance, part of the Hartmann Heirs series: Book 1: How to Catch a Cowboy Book 2: Fake Dating, Twin Style Book 3: Bad Boy Gone Good




From Highrise to High Country & Bad Boy Gone Good


Book Description

Get roped into two blazing hot, scandalous romances with two even hotter cowboys—only from New York Times bestselling author Barbara Dunlop and Katie Frey. From Highrise to High Country by New York Times bestselling author Barbara Dunlop Does she want his family’s story…or their secrets? History professor Ruby Monaco wants to feature the wealthy Colorado ranching dynasty, the Hawkes family, in her new book—and Austin Hawkes isn’t having it. He’d rather the stunning city slicker pack her bags and return to Boston, taking their electric attraction with her. But Ruby’s research has uncovered the story of a lifetime. Can she expose his family’s secrets without sacrificing Austin’s trust…or her heart? Bad Boy Gone Good by Katie Frey This time, she’s breaking all the rules… Despite his millions, August Quaid can’t shake his reputation as the bad boy of Bozeman. Learning the ranching business from the wealthy Hartmann family is his chance to start fresh. Only now Evie Hartmann—his best friend’s goody-goody sister—wants to lose her virginity…to him! August has two truths: he wants Evie and she definitely wants him. And his lie? That he can resist her. Two sizzling romances, one great value!




Boy: A Sketch


Book Description

Reproduction of the original.




A Long Way Gone


Book Description

My new friends have begun to suspect I haven’t told them the full story of my life. “Why did you leave Sierra Leone?” “Because there is a war.” “You mean, you saw people running around with guns and shooting each other?” “Yes, all the time.” “Cool.” I smile a little. “You should tell us about it sometime.” “Yes, sometime.” This is how wars are fought now: by children, hopped-up on drugs and wielding AK-47s. Children have become soldiers of choice. In the more than fifty conflicts going on worldwide, it is estimated that there are some 300,000 child soldiers. Ishmael Beah used to be one of them. What is war like through the eyes of a child soldier? How does one become a killer? How does one stop? Child soldiers have been profiled by journalists, and novelists have struggled to imagine their lives. But until now, there has not been a first-person account from someone who came through this hell and survived. In A Long Way Gone, Beah, now twenty-five years old, tells a riveting story: how at the age of twelve, he fled attacking rebels and wandered a land rendered unrecognizable by violence. By thirteen, he’d been picked up by the government army, and Beah, at heart a gentle boy, found that he was capable of truly terrible acts. This is a rare and mesmerizing account, told with real literary force and heartbreaking honesty.




The Boy Is Gone


Book Description

A story with the power to change how people view the last years of colonialism in East Africa, The Boy Is Gone portrays the struggle for Kenyan independence in the words of a freedom fighter whose life spanned the twentieth century’s most dramatic transformations. Born into an impoverished farm family in the Meru Highlands, Japhlet Thambu grew up wearing goatskins and lived to stand before his community dressed for business in a pressed suit, crisp tie, and freshly polished shoes. For most of the last four decades, however, he dressed for work in the primary school classroom and on his lush tea farm. The General, as he came to be called from his leadership of the Mau Mau uprising sixty years ago, narrates his life story in conversation with Laura Lee Huttenbach, a young American who met him while backpacking in Kenya in 2006. A gifted storyteller with a keen appreciation for language and a sense of responsibility as a repository of his people’s history, the General talks of his childhood in the voice of a young boy, his fight against the British in the voice of a soldier, and his long life in the voice of shrewd elder. While his life experiences are his alone, his story adds immeasurably to the long history of decolonization as it played out across Africa, Asia, and the Americas.