Inspetores da PJ usaram população como principal meio de prova nas casas de Pedrógão jn.pt - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from jn.pt Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
by Alan Stamm Fictional characters resemblances to actual people aren t always purely coincidental, of course. The it s-all-made-up disclaimer before Page 1 is a legal shield, not a barrier that keeps authors from writing what they know. And popular novelist Stephen Mack Jones of Farmington Hills certainly knows a real-life Detroit billionaire who s distinctly like a pivotal figure in Dead of Winter, his newly published third book in a series about private investigator August Snow.
Stephen Mack Jones, author of three novels about a biracial former Detroit cop
(Photo: Twitter) The supposedly made-up character is introduced in Chapter 2 on Page 11 as Detroit s resident billionaire, Vic Bronson, a man who d made his fortune selling mortgages. The setup continues:
Deadline Detroit | Villain in Stephen Mack Jones new Detroit crime novel sure sounds like Dan Gilbert deadlinedetroit.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from deadlinedetroit.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Disappearing Spouses and Dead Boyfriends
Sarah Weinman on four new mysteries that brim with cunning and subterfuge.
Credit.Pablo Amargo
May 6, 2021, 5:00 a.m. ET
A spouse’s disappearance, and the ensuing discovery of a secret self hidden beneath the surface, ranks high on the list of well-worn plot devices. So how does Laura Dave make this conceit feel fresh in
THE LAST THING HE TOLD ME (Simon & Schuster, 306 pp., $27)? I suspect it has something to do with her skill at character-driven fiction, remembering that people, and relationships, must drive the narrative.
Hannah Hall has “raised losing things to an art form,” a tendency that didn’t stop when she married Owen Michaels. But she must rise above distraction and forgetfulness to figure out why Owen has left and the meaning of his final words, relayed by his teenage daughter, Bailey, whose relationship with Hannah is prickly at best and uncommunicative at worst.