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James Lear does Lee Child in his latest sexy and suspenseful
mystery. Dan Stagg is an ex-military man who fell foul of Don't Ask
Don't Tell. Like Jack Reacher, he's prone to violence, always
upholding what he views as justice. With no personal ties and
little money, Dan accepts a job protecting a young male 'secretary'
of a powerful real estate developer. The young man in question is
vain, shallow and very attractive - and it's clear that is idea of
'protection' includes sex. Soon Dan realises that he's being used
as a shield for a much more sinister operation...
Who is trying to kill the members of an elite special ops team that
worked off the radar in Iraq in the '90s? It's up to Dan Stagg to
track down the survivors -- the men with whom he stormed an
undefended surveillance station, killing everyone inside. And now,
many years later, the team is being targeted in what seems like a
series of unrelated attacks. Dan teams up with his old comrade Al
Benson, once a rising star of the USMC, now a respectable married
civilian with a few secrets to hide. As they dig deeper into the
secrets of the past, Dan discovers that Benson's looking for more
than just answers. An explosive affair threatens everyone's future,
and connects Dan to a past he thought he'd left behind.
Best friends and sometimes lovers Edward "Mitch" Mitchell and Harry
"Boy" Morgan have been in terrible jams before -- their adventures
of murder, mystery, and unstoppable sex have made "The Back
Passage" and "The Secret Tunnel" international bestellers. In "A
Sticky End, " Mitch must face the possibility that Boy is involved
in the chain of events that led to the suicide of his own colleague
and secret paramour, Frank Bartlett. To absolve Boy, Mitch races
around London finding clues while bedding the many men eager to
lend a hand -- or more. The policemen, working class gigolos, steam
room bathers, embezzlers, and blackmailers that Mitch comes across
create a tasty mystery and satisfying erotic romp.
Robert Louis Stevenson's Kidnapped has long been considered a
masterpiece of high adventure. In The Low Road, James Lear
reinvents this classic as a satirical, queer, coming-of-age story.
In 1705 Scotland, young Charles Gordon reaches adulthood ignorant
of his family's heroic past in the Jacobite Rebellion. He sets out
to discover the truth about his father, but instead is kidnapped by
mercenaries and sold into slavery as the plaything of a group of
corrupt military officials. But Charlie's talents, in and out of
bed, win him powerful friends as well as dangerous foes. The false
priest, Lebecque, violent Captain Robert, depraved General Wilmott
-- all contribute to Charlie's "education." Eventually leading a
makeshift army of sex-crazed layabouts, Charlie faces the might of
the English forces. Will he triumph, or is it better to retreat to
the safety of his sybaritic lifestyle? James Lear expertly
interweaves spies and counterspies, scheming servants and sadistic
captains, tavern trysts and prison orgies, into this delightfully
erotic work that can take its place alongside his acclaimed novels
The Back Passage and Hot Valley.
Move over, Scarlett O'Hara! It's New England, 1861, and the
troubles in the southern states seem a long way off for Jack
Edgerton, the spoiled son of a prominent Vermont family. Howver,
when he meets and falls in love with Aaron Johnson, the sexy son of
a slave on the run from Virginia, Edgerton's world is turned upside
down. Separated by circumstances, the lovers pursue each other
through the escalating madness of the Civil War and both find
themselves forced to choose sides. After a series of outrageous
adventures - including steamy woodland trysts and an impromptu
jailhouse orgy that briefly reconciles the warring parties - they
are reunited in the Shenandoah Valley in the autumn of 1864 --
where the conflict is about to come to a bloody, burning climax.
Mitch Mitchell needs a vacation, and he is determined to make the
most of his trip to the Mediterranean island of Gozo. Death never
takes a break however, and at the behest of fellow doctor Bob
Southern, Mitch soon finds himself investigating the demise of a
young, gay lance corporal. The police have ruled it a suicide, but
the young man's boyfriend claims it was murder. Suspecting an
official cover-up of a queer scandal, Mitch gets to work on an
investigation that leads him into a labyrinth of lies, false
identities and secret sex. With tension, humor and plenty of Mitch
Mitchell's exuberant sexual encounters, The Sun Goes Down cranks up
the Mediterranean heat for one of his most baffling and dangerous
cases.
Agatha Christie, move over! Hard-core sex and scandal meet in this
brilliantly funny whodunit.
A seaside village, an English country house, a family of wealthy
eccentrics and their equally peculiar servants, a determined
detective -- all the ingredients are here for a cozy Agatha
Christie-style whodunit. But wait -- Edward "Mitch" Mitchell is no
Hercule Poirot, and" The Back Passage" is no" Murder of Roger
Ackroyd." Mitch is a handsome, insatiable 22-year-old hunk who
never lets a clue stand in the way of a steamy encounter, whether
it's with the local constabulary, the house secretary, or his
school chum and fellow athlete Boy Morgan, who becomes his Watson
when they're not busy boffing each other. When Reg Walworth is
found dead in a cabinet, Sir James Eagle has his servant Weeks
immediately arrested as the killer. But Mitch's observant eye pegs
more plausible possibilities: polysexual chauffeur Hibbert, queenly
pervert Leonard Eagle, missing scion Rex, sadistic copper
Kennington, even Sir James Eagle himself. Blackmail, police
corruption, a dizzying network of spyholes and secret passages,
watersports, and a nonstop queer orgy backstairs and everyplace
else mark this hilariously hard-core mystery by a major new talent.
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