NEW SMYRNA BEACH, Fla., Dec. 2, 2002 (PRIMEZONE) -- A serial killer is on the loose. Eleven young men are dead. What can be done when all conventional investigation procedures have failed? This is exactly the dilemma facing the San Diego Sheriff in Susan Gill's new book "Drowned in a Sea of Men" (now available through 1stBooks Library).
"Drowned in a Sea of Men" begins with the hunt for a serial killer known as the "Bounty Hunter." His trademark involves harvesting human organs from his victims. The Bounty Hunter Task Force is facing a blank wall. In desperation, the crime busters turn to Nia Connolly, a forensic psychic from Southern California.
The investigation is redirected to porn films after Nia realizes that the beautiful, violent visions in her hypnotic trances are scenes from movies. This highly erotic arena reopens the floodgates of lust, dragging her into her first love affair with a young rising Irish film star, Seamie Browne. Nia later discovers that Seamie's first acting job was in a hardcore porn movie, the director of which is one of the murder victims. Tension grips the reader as Nia must identify the Bounty Hunter, before he continues with his killing spree on his next circle of prey -- her loved ones.
Author Sue Gill graduated with a bachelor's degree from the College of Notre Dame, Md. and comes from a family of Welsh seanachi and has grown up telling "stories to her tribe around the campfire." She won the Santa Barbara Writer's Conference mystery fiction prize for her mystery series featuring Southern California forensic psychic Nia Connolly. Her work has been published in The Splinter, The Pointer, Columns, the Boston Globe, Seventeen and Glamour. She has two sons and a daughter, and divides her time between New York, California and Florida.
ABOUT 1STBOOKS LIBRARY
The only profitable print-on-demand and eBook publishing company of its kind, 1stBooks Library was founded in 1997 and has helped more than 7,000 authors publish their works. For more information, visit www.1stbooks.com and click on the "Media" image at the top of the page.