Campbell Books
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One of the best thrillers ever!!Review Date: 2008-04-04
Flawless SuspenseReview Date: 2003-06-20
Frank Pagan is the Scotland Yard agent assigned to bring him down.
When a ship carrying over a million dollars' worth of money and weapons for the IRA is attacked in the Atlantic, the two adversaries are thrown into a game of intrigue, deception, violence, and trust that Campbell Armstrong has woven into a flawless novel of suspense that will have all readers on the edge of their seats.
It is in New York City that the two meet face-to-face...and the chase begins. Jig doesn't know where to begin looking for the money. Pagan can't convince the FBI to allow him to investigate in his own way. And Ivor McInnes, a Belfast minister, is working on something so deadly that Jig and Pagan are forced to join forces to stop a scheme that will bring the IRA to its knees.
Featuring a conscience-torn ex-priest, the President's brother, and a mysterious woman named Celestine, "Jig" is a riveting page-turner that echoes the dance it is named after. And the faster the dance gets, the harder the book is to put down.
Outstanding thriller! Current events, character, and actionReview Date: 1997-04-08
Find it.Review Date: 2000-09-28
Frank Pagan, the protagonist, is a bruised, battered London cop, whi is assigned to the anti-terrorist squad.
The "Jig" of the title is a well-accomplished Irish killer.
Frank has to catch him.
So, yes: it's a chase story. And it moves. The body count is awesome, the tension is overwhelming. The atmosphere is gritty, sweaty, saeamy. It's real. While it doesn't actually say so in the text, you know that Frank Hagan is a man who farts. He's human. He's damaged: a widower, still in love with his dead wife. He's... eccentric: a Londoner who drives a huge American car and plays 1950s rock and roll LOUD on the car stereo.
The story is a tad dated, but gripping nonetheless. Read it, then read the follow-ups: Jigsaw, and Heat.
They all compare favourably with Nelson Demille's "Cathedral".. enough said?
Unknown but Brilliant....Review Date: 2002-09-11
Jig is an Irish assassin who is well trained and ruthlessly efficient. He is a fascinating character, his emotions, his feelings are well written throughout the book. Even better is the clever twist about 100 pages into that book that reveals the assassins real identity, making further study into his life and family even more enjoyable.
The story revolves around a stolen shipment of 10 million dollars sent to IRA coffers from a group of high profile American backers. Jig is sent to America by his mentor to find out who took the money and to take it back. Tracking him down is maverick MI-5 investigator Frank Pagan, a man obsessed with Jig. Pagan's wife was killed in an IRA bombing, and he takes it very personally.
The action is well paced, the mystery fairly compelling. The Jig vs. Pagan dynamic drives the book, but there are a host of supporting characters that are intriguing as well.
Jig the book deserves a lot more attention, even as Ireland seemingly is on the path to peace. It's hard to believe that the stories hinted at in Jig took place in reality. Try to find it, it's worth the look.

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Continuing outstanding Chinese backgroundReview Date: 2008-06-24
Having visted Shanghai nine times in the past two years, I find the Chinese background and culture in this series and this mystery in particular are outstanding. Written in 2000 and just released in the USA, this highly charged mystery actually foretells some of Shanghai's modern 21st Century political history of local corruption. While other novelists may touch on the corruption in a lighter, more oblique way, May gets right to the point in demonstrating how the hierarchy works. He touches on the continuing power struggle between Beijing and Shanghai.
The other reviews cover the story line well. The setting of Shanghai is remarkably accurate, and the description of life and families is still quite relevant eight years after the book was authored. (Many things can change in Shanghai in eight years.) As I have Shanghai friends to explain many customs in modern China, I find that May captures them in very subtle ways. May distills the Chinese manners and details them into background throughout the novel.
If you are travelling to Shanghai and want to get an inside look into the city's life, this is a must read. Only you will find that Shanghai is a much safer place than what happens in the vicinity of Margaret and Li.
Excellent!Review Date: 2008-05-24
Murder and misunderstandingReview Date: 2008-04-04
Beijing detective Li Yan is working on a case where a woman's body has been found. It appears the victim had undergone an autopsy while alive, organs removed and her body cut into pieces.
Now Yan is sent to Shanghai to oversee the investigation instigated by a mass grave being found there with the similar remains of 18 women. Yan, oblivious by the attentions of his female counterpart in Shanghai, sends for American pathologist Margaret Campbell, with whom he has worked before and with whom he is lovers. While the nightmare of the case escalates, so do the problems with their relationship.
There was definitely more to like about this book than not. I really enjoy learning about China of today and seeing it through the eyes of both a resident, albeit of Beijing who, himself, doesn't feel comfortable in Shanghai, and an American make the story particularly interesting. Yan is a very good policeman who is classically clueless as a male at times, while Margaret is an excellent pathologist who is almost overwhelming insecure as a woman. Those aspects make the characters very believable and human.
I also learned about pathology and science, but in a way that was clinical; not horrific or ever boring. There is suspense that does build nicely. Although I suspected one villain, I didn't see the other one coming.
The first book of the series, "The Firemaker," is still my favorite, but I shall definitely continue on with Margaret and Li.
Fascinating look at Chinese cultureReview Date: 2008-03-18
I particularly like two aspects of May's books. One is the culture clashes between Li Yan and Margaret Campbell. Despite their strong feelings for each other, they are just very different people. I learn a lot about Chinese culture through Margaret's eyes and would probably make the same missteps she does.
The other is May's ability to explore social and cultural problems in Chinese society. He tries hard to portray both sides of a controversial subject without taking sides. In this book, and a bit of the previous book, The Fourth Sacrifice, that subject is the single-child policy enacted to reduce the population in China. Li Yan's sister previously dropped off her daughter with him when she found she was pregnant with a son. Li Yan remains the child's guardian in this book.
I found more humor in this book than the previous two in this series. The competitions between Margaret and Mei-Ling for the attentions of Li Yan were laugh-out-loud funny. I also find it interesting that these books are written by a Scottish man living in France, writing about an American woman living in China. And he does it very well.
Armchair Interviews says: Super read as a mystery with a lot of cultural learning thrown in.
excellent Chinese police proceduralReview Date: 2008-02-21
Shanghai Public Security Serious Crime Squad Deputy chief Mei-Ling is assigned to assist Li, who learns from her that there are eighteen torsos and sixteen heads so far. Li's on and off Irish girlfriend pathologist Margaret Campbell arrives following the wake of her deceased father. Although the two ladies compete for the affection of Li, the trio works together realizing that someone apparently conducted autopsies on the female victims while they still lived; the cause of death in each case is the autopsy. They know preventing the monster from more killings comes before straightening out their personal relationships.
This excellent Chinese police procedural will please fans of that sub-genre immensely as this is a top rate whodunit in a country in which connections impedes the strong investigation much more so than in the United States where influence gets a great lawyer. The story line is action-packed and the triangle cleverly developed to allow the reader to understand the motivations including personal demons of the investigating team. However, as with THE FOURTH SACRIFICE, the novel belongs to Peter May's deep insightful look at modern China's Socialist market economy in which Shanghai is filled with Porches, sex shops, discos and nightclubs standing near traditional mom and pop stores.
Harriet Klausner

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Beautiful New Mexico ArtReview Date: 2008-06-27
Beautiful Keepsake of the state of New MexicoReview Date: 2007-11-06
Great bookReview Date: 2007-06-13
Beautifully illustrated and with fine picturesReview Date: 2008-04-02
Each artist has a page of introduction and at least three examples of his/her work, occasionally more. While brief the text for each artist is surprisingly comprehensive, providing an indication of background and training along with comments on the work. What is particularly appealing is that it also manages a certain intimacy, bringing each artist to life. What is particularly interesting is the even balance between male and female artists represented. The artists, thirty one in total, range from the established to the immerging, and the range of work is wide, predominantly representational from impressionist to realist, but with a few approaching abstract.
This is a large book, landscape in format which of course allows for most of the work to be shown advantage. It is illustrated throughout in full-colour with well in excess of 200 paintings.
New Mexico Landscape Paintings of EnchantmentReview Date: 2006-08-30

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Live life to its fullestReview Date: 2002-07-18
uplifting and inspirational. Her life before and after
her diagnosis of MS was well written and I found I had to
finish reading it even though I had already started a
John Grisham novel. She has lived her life well and
fully. I recommend Life is an Adventure to anyone--
whether disabled or not.
Life is an Adventure!Review Date: 2002-07-04
If you want to be uplifted and inspired read this book. Her premise: Life is what you make it, so make it a full life.
It is the deeply personal, biographical story of a woman who knows how to live life well.
It is also a practical manual on the changes (physical, emotional and mental) one goes through during the transformation from able bodied to dis-abled. And it is a resource full of up to date medical information and contact numbers.
I enjoyed reading this book and highly recommend it.
A Memorable Story of An Extraordinary LifeReview Date: 2002-07-06
True to LifeReview Date: 2002-09-21
While she did not always have positive reactions at every stage, she focused on what she "could do" rather than staying in the "land of what she couldn't do." She was never a "Pollyanna" and I found that very refreshing.
I could relate to her anger with people that ignored her and/or her needs in various circumstances, as well as her inventiveness (i.e. peeong on the lawn) was not only entertaining, it made me think about how I have handled what life has thrown at me, how I handled that in the past, how I handle it now, and how I will handle it in the future.
The author comes across as a person that is in charge of her life, and I admire that quality.
I would recommend this book not only to people living with a chronic illness, but to anyone interested in living life to it's fullest.
A READER WITH LUPUS
Great BookReview Date: 2002-10-01
I feel this book is so important in seeing the world through the eyes of a disabled person that Iam requiring it for all of my staff.I thank the author for sharing her life with me. She is a most remarkable person.

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Discipline with Less DiscourseReview Date: 2004-01-23
Don't expect a profound philisophical discourse on the similarities between Wesley's concept of "sanctification" and the Eastern Orthodox concept of "Theosis" in this book. But DO expect a nice, clean, concise history of the Methodist denomination, a good explanation of its eccumenicalism, a summary of Wesley's values, and all the promised essentials about what role communion, baptism, and clerical orders play in the modern UMC. The end of the book has a tidy summation of Wesley's "rules" and the general principles of the UMC.
For anyone thinking of joining a Methodist church, seeking information about Methodism, and for those Methodists who want a good, concise reference and explanation, this is THE book. Go hit that "add to my shopping cart" button if you fall into one of these categories!
A GOOD READ!Review Date: 2003-10-01
Good tool for understanding Methodist doctrineReview Date: 2001-07-31
Easy to UnderstandReview Date: 2005-07-19
Fantastic!Review Date: 2004-02-15

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Excellent for experienced and noviceReview Date: 2008-07-10
Stash more cashReview Date: 2007-03-30
All small businesses should read this, this is EXACTLY what big business does and it's rather simple. You have to LOOK at it once a week, but very simple.
David Geller
A "Must Read" for All Business OwnersReview Date: 2005-09-12
Wow! This is a really great book on cash flow!Review Date: 2004-10-05
Thanks to the writer for making my life easier.
Essential - Practical - Wish I had this sooner! Review Date: 2005-01-08

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The side the movies haven't yet portrayedReview Date: 2005-11-29
Then and nowReview Date: 2005-10-27
Great book!Review Date: 2005-10-26
Every veteranReview Date: 2005-10-24
Worth ReadingReview Date: 2005-10-07

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Wonderfully diverse collectionReview Date: 2007-11-28
Read By DawnReview Date: 2007-01-16
The Bloody Best BookReview Date: 2006-11-04
Delightfully WickedReview Date: 2007-06-12
# Last Day on the Job by Jeff Jacobson- I loved the imagery of the world of skyscrapers which so many take for granted raining down upon the bug-like people below. The ending sort of fizzled, but the middle was creepy and amusing, a combination I love.
# The Seventh Green a Lost Lake by Scott Brendel- Golf horror. I love it!
# Lessons by Katherine A. Patterson- One of the creepiest stories in anthology. It's troubling on many levels, with a just desserts style ending and centers entirely on family dynamics, not violence per se.
# Popee by Justin Madison- My co-favorite in the anthology. I love dark humor and I can't even look at the title anymore without picturing a old man zombie gnawing on his grand son, being shoved back and leaving his dentures behind. When I go back through this will be the first one I read.
# The Bloom of Decay by Patricia McCormack- This one wins the creativity award in my opinion. It takes a strong veer from the rest of the stories. The horror in this one comes not from something that happens, or something the character has earned, but from who the character really is. I'm not sure it's flattering to the author, but I'd consider it flattering if someone said it of me, but this story inspired a little story of my own. This one most definitely made me think.
# Final Girl by Joe L. Murr- This one is my other co-favorite. (Hah! And you thought it was going to be my own.) This one caught me by surprise. It's so wrong but so right. It all makes sense with those last few lines, but the situation isn't the only horrible aspect of this tale.
# Frankie by Matt Wedge- This one wins the "I'd need therapy" award. In fact, just browsing the story again as I thumbed through the book to do this review made me put the book down fast, lest I reread a disturbing scene. I'll tell you one thing, these horror writers know human behavior too well. No wonder why normal people are scared of us. We use them against themselves.
# The Woman Who Coughs Up Flies by David Turnbull- This kind of story gives me hope, as a writer. The plot I guessed close to the beginning, but the sheer beauty of the writing sold me this one. It give me hope when I see those "the plot was too predictable" rejects.
# Special Offer by John Llewellyn Probert- I will never channel surf by HSN or QVC again and not think of this story. I really like that it gives a physical pain to people who spend recklessly, either due to a psychological problem or to plain old greed. I know many of these people who show off their neat new playthings while my family makes sure all bills are paid first and fully. I wonder if they would still act the same if they had the consequences presented in this story.
# Body Hunt by Chet Gottfried- Had the above mentioned "Popee" not been in this collection this tale would have won my humor vote. Amusing and dark but a natural dark, not forced. It almost reads like a dark sitcom.
# What Betty Saw by Joel Jacobs- A nice story at the end about the end. I would not have placed this story anywhere else in the collection as it does a fantastic job of bringing the anthology to a very final (burning) end.
I'd also like to note that there were no bad, poor, or even fair stories between these white covers. Every story had it merits, some merely connected better with me than others. My complete reading only serves to make me more proud of being including among these fantastic writers' tales. I am definitely putting volume two on my to buy list, as I will not be within it pages.
Good luck to Bloody Books and all the authors who have been included within their publications. May you receive the recognition you deserve.
Read By Dawn a Must!!!Review Date: 2006-11-07
This has been a great year for anthologies. First we got Lee and Wilbanks' knock out collection, "Damned Nation", and then Skipp's long awaited zombie anthology, "Mondo Zombie", and now from Bloody Books we have READ BY DAWN. Put together by Adele Hartley, Director of "Dead By Dawn", Scotland's International Horror Film Festival, the anthology showcases writers from around the world, including Finland, America, Scotland, Canada, and Australia. If there is an international language for horror, this anthology is it. Among the 30 stories within, I consider only a few to fall into the mediocre category, most go straight to my favorite short stories of the year list. If this collection doesn't sweep the International Horror Guild and the Stokers awards next year, and get some respectable page space in Ellen Datlow's "Year's Best Fantasy and Horror", there is no justice.
Some of my particular favorites- I mean the ones that downright made me gasp aloud or shiver while reading them- were "Bloodwalker" by Michelle Lee, an alternative universe tale of practical evil, "The Face in the Glass" by Brian G. Ross, and Rayne Hall's "The Bridge Chamber" (take that, The Descent). I'd also like to call attention to Samuel Minier's "Stuck" as a particularly well-written piece, subtle and heart wrenching, even to the bloody end. And I liked the way Lavie Tidhar takes the Alice In Wonderland theme across the world and plops it into war torn Germany in "Eine Kleine Nachmusik (1943)". But I think if I had to choose a favorite it would be "The Kylesku Trow" by Stefan Pearson; the tale's last riddle will haunt me for many years to come.
Bloody Books knows how to package. The austere red, white, black and gray cover draws you in, and the font is easy reading despite the size of the slim volume. I have only one complaint with the book's construction: There are no author names listed with the tales themselves, neither in the Table of Contents or the traditional top of the page of each story. If one needs to find the author, one must either go back to the first page of the story, or scan the tiny print of the copyright page. But this is such a small thing compared to the fine stories this volume gives us. My hope is that subsequent volumes will fix this issue. But in the professional hands of the editor, I think the next volume will be even more engrossing and bring to light some of the new names in horror. And the U.K.'s most respected living horror author, Ramsey Campbell, must think they've got what it takes to become something quite special, as he adds a touching story of his own to the collection and provides a wrap around piece as well. "The Place of Revelations" seems to be his nod to the new voices in the genre and is, as usual, brilliantly written work from a master of the craft.
In the absence of so many beloved ongoing anthology series, this is one to keep your eyes on in the future to give you the well-written, exciting horror fix you need.
--Nickolas Cook

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Reflections from MD via VAReview Date: 2007-05-07
T. Jones, Maryland
Great Book CCReview Date: 2007-02-06
I am eagerly awaiting your next installment, and look forward to someday seeing your name up in lights at the movies. Mr. "D" still believes in you.
Reflection of ManyReview Date: 2006-11-06
Coming of AgeReview Date: 2006-10-31
There are experiences that do not fit into a child's world, decisions made, responsibilities accepted and bravery shown by someone with a strong desire to be a pattern breaker and move beyond the world he was born into.
This book parallels urban society in a myriad of ways and could be set in almost any country. It reflects the desire to grow and excel beyond our surroundings and the journey that gets us there. It is a page turner, thought provoking and a quick read!
Why I wrote this book.Review Date: 2006-11-09

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A WONDERFUL WEEKEND WRAPPED IN MYSTERY!Review Date: 2006-08-10
Secret of the ScrollReview Date: 2003-05-03
Rus Morgan -- Host Interviewer for PBS "Book Talk" at Radio Station WYPL in Memphis TN. (103 books read and authors interviewed in the series since its inception in 1993). The male 'Grandma Moses' of mystery fiction. Member of MWA and PMA. Author of three novels, the stunning "Blackberries Got No Thorns" and two sizzling scifi mysteries, "The Voodoo Vortex" and "Luci"...
Secret of the ScrollReview Date: 2002-12-02
vacation in the Middle East. The guided tour had gone quite well for the tour group; they enjoyed the
Mediterranean and the ages old biblical sights. But tours must eventually end and the time arrives for the
McKenzie's to return home to Nashville, Tennessee, in the good ole USA. Although Greg did become a little
suspicious when he was the only one in the group that was told to put his name on his luggage tag in huge, bold
letters when boarding the plane for home. Greg is a retired Air Force officer who worked on the ground in the
OSI - Office of Special Investigations, so he just sloughed off his suspicions as being an old habit and tried to
dismiss it from his mind. But now at Kennedy International when the locks were discovered missing, his
curiosity was again piqued.
First the large name on the luggage, now the missing locks. Maybe his suspicions are founded after all.
Authorities were notified and a quick riffle through their bags showed nothing missing that they could tell.
Greg advised Jill that they would do a more thorough job of checking for missing items when they got home.
Greg's close friend, Sam Gannon, usually has a million and one war stories that he likes to relate over and
over, time and again. On one of Greg's visits to Sam's all track of time was lost and resulted in Greg being
over an hour
late after the time he told Jill he would be home. Upon entering the back entrance to his home from the garage
he was met with total chaos. His OSI training kicked in and he started adding things together: Annoying
incidents in the Holy Land; being singled out at the border; the large, identifying name on the luggage tag; the
missing locks from the luggage. After searching the entire house upstairs and down, he knew Jill had been
kidnapped. He read several little clues that were left behind by Jill that told him she had been taken against her
will. Little things that Jill knew only he could recognize,
and therefore not alert the kidnappers.
He reported the kidnapping to the Metro Police, then sat by the phone waiting for the call he felt sure would
come. It finally did. A strange voice demanded to know where the scroll was. The scroll? That cheap imitation
that he paid four dollars for at a souvenir stand? Or was it an imitation? Obviously someone must not think so.
Thus Greg has to pull himself out of retirement into one of the most emotional cases he has ever worked on.
Using some of his old contacts, he tries to have the scroll deciphered, while at the same time trying to find
Jill.
The conflict between deadly groups of Palestinians and deadly groups of Israelis who both claim ownership to
the scroll have Greg caught in the middle with Jill's life at stake. He has a long row to hoe with many dangers
confronting him, Jill, and his friends that necessitate another trip to the Holy Land; something Greg hoped
would not have to happen. Women were not the most respected people over there so his fear for Jill escalated
into panic.
And how was one to begin searching in a strange land for a missing person?
This is a superbly written book with an excellent plot. The action is on going and riveting. The characters walk
off the page to the reader, and one can see them as they act out the story. There is no clothes-line effect in this
story. It moves along smoothly with plenty of excitement. This one is a keeper for sure.
Mr. Campbell has imparted a lot of interesting information without sounding like a history book. In fact if
school history books were written like this every student would be a history buff. Reviewed by: Shirley Truax
A classic page-turnerReview Date: 2003-10-12
A retired Air Force investigator, McKenzie's pursuit of justice, no matter whose toes he tramples, has cost him a job as a district attorney's investigator and earned him the enmity of the Metro Nashville Police Department.
Those problems are quickly eclipsed when McKenzie buys a souvenir Dead Sea Scroll jar during a trip to the Holy Land. By the time his tour group arrives back in Nashville, assorted Israelis, Palestinians and freelance fanatics are hot on his trail.
Seems the scroll in the old clay jar is the real thing. It holds a code revealing the location of long-lost treasures from Solomon's Temple.
SECRET OF THE SCROLL is a classic page-turner, without an excess of blood spatters. There's plenty of action, but the suspense comes from McKenzie's efforts to outwit the shadowy figures who will stop at nothing to retrieve the scroll.
The real secret of the scroll is a corker, and Greg McKenzie is an attractive, very human hero. Both he and his creator have a sense of humor. The closing paragraphs made me laugh.
I'm looking forward to the second entry in this series. DESIGNED TO KILL is due out from Durban House in 2004.
There's more information at Campbell's website: http://www.chesterdcampbell.com.
Pat Browning, author of FULL CIRCLE
Fun and refreshing...Review Date: 2002-10-23
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