SLEEPING WARRIOR

This Ain't A Game

by Patrick F. Sullivan

SLEEPING WARRIOR
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SLEEPING WARRIOR

This Ain't A Game

by Patrick F. Sullivan

Published May 28, 2021
412 Pages
6 x 9 Black & White Paperback
Genre: FICTION / Mystery & Detective / General


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Book Details

Cruel men delight in doing dreadful things. God help the women and children.

Galvan has just stepped off start, more accurately re-start. He’s a man is possessed by a past which informs a limited future.

He’s resolute, prepared to intervene on behalf of the right thing, as soon as he figures out what that is.

He has been away, two years spent outside Gardez on the far side of the Seat of the King. Well almost two years, until it killed him. Bethesda put Galvan back in the game, for now.

While Galvan was gone, someone did terrible things to women he loved.

Days Galvan makes boats. Nights he fights sleep. Sleep brings a repeating nightmare loop. He survives, others don’t. Galvan rides the blast wave to perdition. Having died a bit, he’s swimming for the surface, before the dark depths decide to keep him.

In his wandering, Galvan is toyed with by the Serial Killer who killed the women. The killer is enjoying his torment. What could be more fun?

Justice has long been put off. Vile things have done. A bill needs to be put paid. Rules are rules. Bad things have been done.

Galvan’s back. He might just do something awful.

What more could one ask of a cold rainy day’s read?

 

About the Author

Patrick F. Sullivan

About the Author: On its most primary level, art imitates life. More complexly, one’s life can imitate art. Maybe, art best serves as a reflection of one’s observations on the subject of life and the world. The author has been student of the law and martial arts, the Peace of Westphalia and the application of small arms in close quarter combat, the inter-personal minutia of homicide analysis and the complexity of terrorism as a group weapon, and of late has pursued psycho-sexual serial murderers while formally studying the sociological relationship inherent to the hierarchical relations between states. Why? Who knows? Life happens. One does what one does.