The fictional memoirs of an innocent teenager who becomes a feared, violent wise guy and deep cover agent. He leads a double life: one as a calm family man, the other as a vicious hunter/assassin and body guard.
From the New York Times bestselling, Edgar-Award winning author of Under the Harrow and Northern Spy, a "breathtaking" (The New York Times Book Review) page-turner inspired by a shocking true crime A better person would forgive him.
A boy who lives every day twice uses his ability to bring down bullies at his new school in Mike Thayer's humor-filled middle grade novel, The Double Life of Danny Day.
A Double Life
When eighteen-year-old Lexi of Morgantown, West Virginia, becomes the body double of a famous pop star, she discovers that the girl she is replacing is actually her half-sister, and that their father is a famous rock star.
Terrifying True Crime Stories "What makes Double Lives so terrifying is that these events are real. After 20 years as a cop, these are the stories that keep me up at night." ─Sgt.
Another of his stories for Morrison, “Maybe Next Year,” was also accepted by the Advocate. Mailer thought enough of it to reprint it in Advertisements for Myself with a prefatory note explaining that the inspiration was Faulkner's The ...
With fresh and revealing information on every page A Restless, Hungry Feeling tells the story of Dylan's meteoric rise to fame: his arrival in early 1961 in New York, where he is embraced by the folk scene; his elevation to spokesman of a ...
Michael very blountly tells it like it is, in this page turning tale of resiliency, inner strength, and courage. * Learn what the tell tale signs may be if your child is being sexually or otherwise abused * Know what steps you can take if ...
Profiles the successful woman author who hid behind the male pen name of James Tiptree, Jr., to publish short works of science fiction in the 1970s, describing her work as an intelligence officer during World War II and her shocking suicide ...
“A seriously stylish, hugely compelling mystery... I was utterly gripped.” – Lucy Foley