Tuesday, 20 March 2018

13 Criminals, One Child, All Missing


 The Imposter, Daniel Norrish

Thirteen criminals snatched from their deviant vocations to be bound, gagged, and forced to surrender terrifying information with thick bundles of cash. The best bit: their final moments of freedom, along with their confessions, are recorded in, “The Imposter.”

This novel is divided into over a dozen sections, each presenting separate pieces of evidence and clues learned by the only people to meet The Imposter, his victims. But who is he? And how can he slip into the spreading cracks of Julian Lime’s crime syndicate without being detected?

He must be a traitor, and he must be joining the desperate meetings and terrified conversations as the survivors try to figure out who is dead or simply missing.



“The Imposter,” proposes theological crime questions, and illuminates the peculiar practices of criminals. Why would thieves damage credit card machines, why do money launderers send cash offshore to be scrubbed clean, and is it possible to move contraband over a border without a single pair of hands needing to touch it?

There is not one single “good” character in this book, and you might find yourself hoping for the demise of every single deviant protagonist. You might find yourself pleading with The Imposter to surrender and end his electrifying rampage. Whatever your morals encourage, you’ll be asking yourself one final question: IS HE ALREADY INSIDE?

“No one remembers their birth, but you won’t forget the day you die. Trust me; I was murdered on October the sixteenth, twenty-seventeen when I was shot in the face.”
-Mary Lime, the original victim.

Get it here: THE IMPOSTER 




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