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FREE Today! An Incomprehensible Admission, a Horrifying Deed, a Secret With The Power to Destroy – PALE CRIMINAL by Ray Harvey

Pale Criminal

by Ray Harvey

5.0 stars – 10 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

An incomprehensible admission, a horrifying deed … A secret with the power to destroy, and a superhuman father with beast-like brilliance …

At age thirteen, five years after his mother’s death, Joel Gasteneau is beaten so brutally by his father that he almost doesn’t survive. Yet he makes himself live, his strength of will extraordinary even then, and he runs away from home.

Alone and comforted only by running and the bloodless beauty of math, he makes his own way, rising eventually to the Green Berets: an elite athlete who nevertheless cannot quite outdistance himself from the torments of his childhood.

Now, at thirty-three, consumed by doubt and a growing sense of hypochondria, he resolves at last to follow through on an idea he first thought of when he was a child: to seek out a piece of evidence that shows with certainty God’s hand at work upon the earth. But in seeking this evidence, he’s stricken by an enigmatic illness that almost kills him: and there, inside the fevered meat of his brain, he unearths a memory so chilling that his life is forever altered.

One of the most challenging novels of the last decade, Pale Criminal is at its core an inquiry into godless morality and human virtue, an exploration of how we live, part mystery story, part literary crime novel combing the surreal imagery of Nabokov with the psychological complexity of Dostoevsky — a metaphysical thriller of mind-spinning intrigue and a philosophical odyssey into the most fundamental questions.

About The Author

Ray A. Harvey, novelist, essayist, editor, athlete, and bartender, son of Firman Charles Harvey (RIP) and his wife Cecilia, youngest of thirteen half brothers and half sisters, was born and raised in the small mining town of Ouray, Colorado. He matriculated at the University of Wyoming, which he attended on a track scholarship. He discovered Shakespeare when he was still a teenager and Ludwig von Mises when he was twenty-one. He is largely self-taught in the areas of literature, philosophy, and economics.

His first novel, More and More unto the Perfect Day, is a literary crime novel of astronomical proportions, and that same book has recently been rewritten and its title updated to Pale Criminal: the Story of a Notorious Abomination.

(This is a sponsored post.)

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