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From out of revolutionary Africa comes one who considers himself to be a demon-incarnate. He enters the employment of the secret government of the United States of America. The President doesn't know that he exists. Neither do the members of the President's Cabinet. One member of the National Security Council, Henry Nicholsson, is very much aware of the monster who authoritatively stalks the land. As if he had traded his soul for the pleasure of killing, the evil one, Gerhardt Botha, eliminates those who his superiors consider to be dangerous to the security of the United States . Botha, convinced that he is Abaddon, Prince of Darkness, also efficiently stalks and eliminates all those in the United States Government who come to realize that his hideous slaughter must stop. As if he had traded his soul for the pleasure of killing, the evil one seeks out his prey. His methods are quick, relentless, frightening, and unerringly efficient. The apparition possesses a cunning and skill that the modern world has seldom experienced. The mad man's actions are always purposeful, yet they are also the violent release for his sexual passion. Douglas Jakowski, also called Wolf Man, is, once again, innocently plunged into mortal conflict with a psychotic killer. This time the creature, his adversary, reeks with ruthlessness and possesses a cunning far beyond the human condition. ABADDON'S WAY moves rapidly, globally, yet most of the action occurs in peaceful, tranquil settings such as a small town USA, Ontario lake country, the Hoh Rain Forest of Washington state, Montana and metropolitan Dayton, Ohio, Douglas's home. Contrary to his adversary, Douglas searches for compassion, wanting desperately to leave the horrors that he confronts behind him. He tries to believe that people are universal in virtue as well as flawed in character. Seemingly indestructible, the evil one errs. He is directed to eliminate a boy-child; a Native American holy child who is considered by some as the reincarnate being of John the Baptist. What follows John Baptiste, they perceive, will be the second coming of Jesus Christ. Such an event would shatter the tranquility and security of those institutions and individuals who are in power. Douglas, seeking to protect the child, solicits the aid of two of his acquaintances, former Special Forces members, his fiancé, and Blackfeet tribal members. One of the latter, Lone Walker, is a special friend. The killer stalks his prey and in so doing releases the forces of the Old Ones; the Ancient Ones. Thus Abaddon, the human demon, encounters the spirits of the holy ones of the Blackfeet Nation. A concerted assault upon the fortified home of the boy, John Baptiste, erupts into unimaginable violence. While the fighting goes on the child and Douglas's fiancé are captured and hidden away in the depths of Glacier National Park. Intense cold and a great blizzard, roaring out of Alberta, Canada, compound the difficulties that Douglas encounters in his attempt to successfully rescue his loved ones. All of this occurs within the realm of reality as modern man knows it. ABBADON'S WAY irresistibly thrusts the reader's curiosity forward, ever rising in suspense. Finally, the ultimate conflict explodes within the great white wilderness of the Montana park.
Throughout the novel the reader becomes more and more cognizant of what it means to be human, no matter what we become otherwise.
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The Warrior Angels presents the reader with an intriguing enigma of
perplexing incidents that drive the main character, Douglas
Jakowski, alias Wolf Man, deeper and deeper into conflict with
a secret, clandestine United States organization that is
responsible for the deaths of perhaps hundreds of American
citizens. Douglas, the same
wildlife management agent who was a central figure in the
novel, Medicine Grizzly, struggles to resolve the murder of
his Father through the use of the legal, moral and religious
institutions that he and his society so devoutly revere.
Thwarted time and again, Wolf Man
has no choice but to seek the guidance of Native American
spiritual forces. He is gradually transformed into a killer no
less powerful than the greatest warrior the Apache Nation ever
produced. The Warrior
Angels takes place in the late 20th Century. Awesome
Pacific coastlines, magnificent volcanoes and the vast
expanses of southwestern Texas, all generate an excitement, an
enticement to continue reading, that any adventuresome mind,
of either gender, cannot help but pursue to the climactic
end. Modern society, Indian
lore, animal behavior, and sensual love all meld into the
reader experiencing a magnificent adventure, a highlight of
one's literary experience
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HERE TO ORDER
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