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New Release Bestseller! Kindle Nation Daily Bargain Book Alert! From Andrew E. Kaufman, author of the #1 bestseller While the Savage Sleeps, comes a psychological thriller you truly will not be able to put down: THE LION, THE LAMB, THE HUNTED – 10 Straight 5-Star Reviews, Just $2.99!

Kindle Nation Daily readers have seen it happen — and made it happen — before, with a handful of indie authors of distinction who have soared out of nowhere to the top of the Kindle bestseller lists. Now, from Andrew E. Kaufman, author of the #1 bestseller While the Savage Sleeps, comes a psychological thriller you truly will not be able to put down: THE LION, THE LAMB, THE HUNTED – 10 Straight 5-Star Reviews, Just $2.99! 

Just released last week, THE LION, THE LAMB, THE HUNTED jumped into the top 40 in the Psychological Thrillers category with yesterday’s Free Kindle Nation Shorts excerpt — a pretty clear sign that once you start reading this book, you will not want to stop. And we think its bestseller ride has just begun.

The Lion, the Lamb, the Hunted

by Andrew E. Kaufman
5.0 stars – 10 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
SHE ONLY STEPPED OUTSIDE FOR A MINUTE…But a minute was all it took to turn Jean Kingsley’s world upside down–a minute she’d regret for the rest of her life.STEPPING INTO HER WORST NIGHTMARE…
 
Because when she returned, she found an open bedroom window and her three-year-old son, Nathan, gone. The boy would never be seen again.

A NIGHTMARE THAT ONLY BECAME WORSE.

WARNING: If you watch this book trailer, you're going to want to read the book.

A tip leads detectives to the killer, a repeat sex offender, and inside his apartment, a gruesome discovery. A slam-dunk trial sends him off to death row, then several years later, to the electric chair.

CASE CLOSED. JUSTICE SERVED…OR WAS IT?

Now, more than thirty years later, Patrick Bannister unwittingly stumbles across evidence among his dead mother’s belongings. It paints his mother as the killer and her brother, a wealthy and powerful senator, as the one pulling the strings.

WHAT REALLY HAPPENED TO NATHAN KINGSLEY?
 


There’s a hole in the case a mile wide, and Patrick is determined to close it. But what he doesn’t know is that the closer he moves toward the truth, the more he’s putting his life on the line, that he’s become the hunted. Someone’s hiding a dark secret and will stop at nothing to keep it that way.

The clock is ticking, the walls are closing, and the stakes are getting higher as he races to find a killer–one who’s hot on his trail. One who’s out for his blood.

(This is a sponsored post.)

Publetariat Dispatch: Why the Decision to Kill Off a Character Can Be Murder on an Author

Publetariat: For People Who Publish!In today’s Publetariat Dispatch, Crime Fiction Collective author Andrew E. Kaufman talks about the repercussions of killing off a character.

 

This post, by Andrew E. Kaufman, originally appeared on The Crime Fiction Collective blog and is reprinted here in its entirety with that site’s permission.

Somewhere during the course of my novels, someone has to die—actually, several people do. That’s just the nature of the beast. My stories revolve around evil-doers, and most will stop at nothing to get what they want. Even murder. And really, what’s a mystery without a body or three?

That’s not to say writing them is easy—it isn’t. For an author, killing off characters is a big responsibility and in some cases, risky business. After all, plotting a novel is one thing—plotting a murder is completely another. It has to make sense, has to fit in with the story, and most importantly, has to move things forward in a logical manner. Kill the wrong character and you could wind up with a real mess on your hands (so to speak). The effects can be catastrophic, throwing everything completely off-balance. I know this because on occasion it’s happened to me, and when it has I’ve had to chuck the entire story and start all over again. Trust me, folks, it’s no fun: we’re talking pull-your-hair-out-of your-head, gnash-your-teeth-to-powder sort of moments.

Then there’s the emotional side. Like readers, we get attached to our characters, too, probably even more so. For me, they’re like my children. I created them, and sometimes I hate to see them go. So when the story dictates that one of them must die, it can be troublesome, to say the least. I often don’t want to do it. I struggle. That’s when I have to step away from my feelings and remember that it’s all about the story. The good news is that hopefully, if I’m feeling the pain, the reader might, too. Maybe it’s a sign I’m getting it right. Or maybe it’s just a sign that I’ve lost my mind. Not sure which.

And there are other risks, implications which can occur off the page. Killing the wrong character can make readers really angry.

That’s what happened to Karin Slaughter (SPOILER ALERT) a few years back when she ended the life of one of her most beloved characters. It created a huge backlash. Readers were furious, many accusing her of doing it for the shock value and vowing to never pick up another one of her books again. It got so bad in fact that Slaughter ended up having to post a letter on her website explaining her decision. Not sure whether it made a difference, but as an author I can understand what she went through.

So what about you? Readers: ever been really upset over the death of a character? And authors: What have your experiences been while offing one of your peeps?

Let’s chat.