Description:
At first glance, the
Gods of Olympus are as different from one another as salt is from sugar.
Despite their bickering, they share a universal bond, a thread of
commonality that unites them.
They’re all jerks.
After a stint with the Olympic Bureau of Investigation, Plato Jones is through with the Gods and their political games. Against his protests, he's drawn into a murder investigation, where the murderer's targets are the Gods themselves.
Plato has cracked some tough cases: exposing cheating spouses, capturing treasonous heretics, hunting three-headed dogs. But this time he’s in over his head. How can he solve a crime that’s impossible to commit? And what chance does Plato—a mere mortal—have against something powerful enough to kill a God?
They’re all jerks.
After a stint with the Olympic Bureau of Investigation, Plato Jones is through with the Gods and their political games. Against his protests, he's drawn into a murder investigation, where the murderer's targets are the Gods themselves.
Plato has cracked some tough cases: exposing cheating spouses, capturing treasonous heretics, hunting three-headed dogs. But this time he’s in over his head. How can he solve a crime that’s impossible to commit? And what chance does Plato—a mere mortal—have against something powerful enough to kill a God?
About the author:
A fan of thrillers, fantasy, and science
fiction, Robert B. Warren has been writing stories ever since he could hold a
pencil. In 2009, he received a Bachelor of Arts degree in English and creative
writing from the University of Alabama—Roll Tide! He currently lives in the
South.
Excerpt:
New Olympia came alive at night.
Dozens of bars and nightclubs lit up throughout the city, but the real action
took place on Siren Strip. It stretched for nearly two miles through the center
of downtown, a river of neon lights. Traffic was at a standstill.
Herc was waiting for me at the
side of a coffee shop, where the lights were low. A black shirt, jeans, and a
baseball cap covered most of his oversize frame. Dark shades concealed his
eyes. This was his idea of a disguise. The fact that he was seven feet tall
with biceps as big as watermelons kind of ruined the effect.
I crossed the street and joined
him in the alleyway. “How’s it going?”
“Were you followed?”
“Of course not. Stealth is my
middle name. Plato Stealth Jones.”
“Gotta good feeling about this
new disguise, Jonesy.” Herc grinned nervously. “The hat and the sunglasses cost
five credits apiece, but I plan on getting a refund first thing tomorrow.”
I took a closer look at the
sunglasses and noticed the sticker was still on them. “I don’t think your
adoring public will appreciate being deceived like this.”
“Screw the public!” Herc poked
his head out of the alley for a split second—to see if anyone had heard
him—then dipped back into the shadows. “This is crazy. I can’t take a piss in
my own house without it ending up in the tabloid. ‘Hercules, taking a piss in
his own house. Is he really taking a piss? Or is he secretly cheating on his
wife? Does he stuff his pants? We’ve got the truth.’ Don’t they have anything
better to do than pester me?”
The Gods and Demigods of Olympus
are worldwide celebrities. Wherever they go, fans and paparazzi follow close
behind.
I chuckled softly. You’d think
that after years of being in the public eye, Herc would have gotten used to the
attention by now. “Scandal of the century,” I said.
Herc opened his mouth to respond,
but was interrupted by the sound of approaching footsteps. He sank deeper into
the shadows and froze as a pair of college girls in bright makeup and glittery
dresses passed the alley.
Once they had gone, he released a
pent-up breath. “That was close,” he whispered. “By the way, Geno’s hanging out
with us tonight.”
“The more the merrier. Where is
he?”
“Probably waiting for us at the
Night Owl.”
“Well, let’s not keep him
waiting.”
Herc peeked around the corner.
“We move on three. One . . . two . . .”
We slipped out of the alley and
scurried down the sidewalk. Herc tugged his hat down and tried to look
inconspicuous. A group of passersby stopped to look at him. It wasn’t a good
sign.
We hadn’t been walking for very
long when someone shouted, “It’s Hercules!”
Light flashed on the edge of my
vision, and voices erupted as a gang of paparazzi appeared. I had no idea where
they came from. It was like they had materialized out of thin air. Hera’s
doing?
Herc covered his face and walked
faster. I did the same. The paparazzi followed us, taking snapshots. Hanging
out with a Demigod meant that my face occasionally graced the covers of
tabloids, where I was known not as Plato Jones, crack detective, but as
Hercules’s servant, that guy who hangs out with Hercules, or Hercules’s gay
lover. I’d called the reporter for a retraction on that last one, but he never
returned my calls.
I couldn’t figure out why the
press had never bothered to find out who I was. Maybe it was because I wasn’t a
celebrity. Or maybe I just didn’t look that interesting. I guess it didn’t
really matter. The idea of fame never appealed to me. Now fortune, that’s a
different story.
By the time Herc and I reached
the end of the block, the group of photographers had evolved into a mob.
Fortunately, the bar was around the corner.
It was little more than a hole in
the wall, squeezed between an Italian bistro and a place that claimed to have
the best Buffalo wings in town. White neon lights spelled out “Night Owl.”
Napoleon, the bouncer, stood with
his arms crossed beside the door. Brown fur covered his body, topped with
smoky-gray horns on his head. He was a minotaur. His black T-shirt had the word
SECURITY written on it in bold white lettering. How he managed to fit those
horns through the neck hole was a question only he could answer. I wasn’t about
to ask him.
The photographers gathered around
us and continued to snap pictures. But all maintained a distance from the
eight-foot-tall minotaur.
“Napoleon,” I said. “How’s life
treating you?”
He returned the minotaur
equivalent of a smile. It looked more like a grimace. “I can’t complain.” His
voice came out low and scratchy. “Why don’t you fellows go on in? I’ll keep the
vultures at bay.”
“I owe you one, Napoleon,” Herc
said.
“Anytime.”
The Blog Tour and giveaway was organized by Good Choice Reading Blog Tours
6 comments:
Nu am citit genul acesta de carti,dar mi-ar placea:D
Succes celor ce se inscrie !
Pare interesanta. Succes tuturor!
ce combinatie intre o carte politista si o carte cu zei! chiar mi-as dori sa o citesc
coperta imi place foarte mult :)
Nu cred ca as citi genul acesta de carti. . . Multa bafta celor care s-au inscris!
Am dori aceste carti traduse si la noi in tara.
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