Saturday, July 30, 2016
Paint the Town Red will soon be available in paperback...
Thursday, July 28, 2016
new book out on amazon....
Kavanagh Mysteries: Book #1 Paint the Town Red
Amazon.com https://amzn.com/B01J7T0INS
Ajay is a struggling detective still trying to find his place in the world. When Julia Temple, a beautiful avant-garde model, walks into his life with an unusual missing person's case for him to solve, Ajay finds that it's not only his business that's taking a sudden turn, but his love life as well.
Previously published as Tapping Darkness. Re-edited.
Kavanagh Mysteries: Book #1 Paint the Town Red
Amazon.com https://amzn.com/B01J7T0INS
Ajay is a struggling detective still trying to find his place in the world. When Julia Temple, a beautiful avant-garde model, walks into his life with an unusual missing person's case for him to solve, Ajay finds that it's not only his business that's taking a sudden turn, but his love life as well.
Previously published as Tapping Darkness. Re-edited.
Saturday, July 16, 2016
Getting to the end of the first Jack Singer mystery. Finalized the cover. There's going to be some chapter headers as well. It looks like a great package.
A first excerpt: Copyrighted 2016 by Isaac Inness/Produx House, corp.
A first excerpt: Copyrighted 2016 by Isaac Inness/Produx House, corp.
Jack Singer was darkness traveling on
foot through that blighted neighborhood. His black hair was scruffy. Black
sunglasses on his narrow face mirrored the world as he stared resolutely ahead
of him. His over large, black trench coat swirled around his body as he walked
with long strides down the sidewalk towards the morning train. His black combat
boots made a firm sound with every step, keeping in time to the pounding rhythm
of the song coming through his earbuds.
The crush of pedestrians making their
morning commute parted in Jack’s path to let him through as if they were polar
opposites repelling each other. He was a fluttering raven among people bundled
against the cold; a crowd that had been made featureless gray by a lowering
white sky.
Run-down apartment buildings and
marginal businesses lined the street in a hodgepodge of styles from different
eras. They seemed to slump towards the street full of cars that were bumper to
bumper and expelling exhaust in white clouds. The good elements of society
rubbed elbows with the worst in a miasma of humanity; shopping, taking their
kids to school, going to work, or standing on street corners ready to rob the
weak or start a fight.
Two young men came careening out of the
crowd as they did their best to pound each other into oblivion. They were
dressed poorly for the weather, as if trying to show their machismo. Tattoos
covered their bodies in intricate designs, symbols, and inflammatory words.
Some were engraved crudely, as if done with a sharp instrument during a drunken
night of grief or rage. Piercings and holes peppered them in places that were
designed to cause conversations about the decline of youth, morality, and
common sense.
The crowd wisely gave them space.
Without breaking stride, his mind lost
in the beat of the music and his eyes intently examining the ether, Jack
challenged their claim to a piece of urban territory that had been theirs by
right of might. They almost collided with Jack and then seem to veer off at the
last possible moment as if repelled by the barrier of Jack’s indifference. They
broke off their fight and wore mirror expressions of wariness as he passed and
continued down the sidewalk. In the next moment, they collided together as they
began their fight again, two elemental titans of muscle and negative emotions
hell bent on mutual destruction.
Light rain began dripping from the sky
as if God was personally taking it into his own hands to make everyone’s
morning commute a little more miserable. Some people pulled up their hoods. A
few better prepared souls raised and opened umbrellas. Jack had neither, nor
did a blind, crippled beggar.
Sitting in his wheelchair by the wall of
a boarded up business, the beggar’s dark sunglasses were looking hard at
nothing. His thick, gray brows were drawn down in a frown. His dark skin was
wrinkled and leathery. His clothing was made up of thrift store specials. The
sign he wore was cardboard, its message, scrawled in black marker, a plea or a
condemnation; Need help. It was placed in front of a plastic cup, the generic kind
that usually came with a fast food drink, or from a gas station drink fountain
that gave reduced refills if you returned with the cup. Rain drops covered the
old man like diamonds.
The beggar wasn’t
part of Jack’s reality, the paper machine was. Pausing in front of it, Jack
searched through his deep pockets for change. While his pockets were
repositories for every kind of object, some needed and others not, he
discovered that change was absent from the inventory. Swearing under his
breath, Jack turned unerringly towards the beggar. Striding across the sidewalk,
he leaned and purposefully gazed into the beggar’s cup. Reaching into it, as if
afraid of contamination, he sifted through the
coins and bills intently.
The beggar’s indignation was clear.
“Hey! What are you doing? You’re stealing from the blind, you fucker!” He
jerked the cup away from Jack, but not quickly enough. Jack had taken just
enough to pay for his newspaper.
Ignoring the beggar’s
curses, Jack returned to the paper machine. He put in his coins, retrieved his
paper, and tucked it under his arm. Furious, the beggar started to rise from
his chair, but then restrained himself and settled into his seat again. His
quick, covert glances at the crowd, revealed his intent to defraud the public.
After re positioning his cup and his sign, he glared after Jack’s retreating back and spat aside.
His spit mixed with the rain on the sidewalk.
Tuesday, July 5, 2016
Sent off the new script....my bank account needs food.... *Tries to keep the hungry thing from gnawing off leg*
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