Sometimes you have to go home to find out who you really areCharlie West went to bed one night an ordinary high school student. He woke up a hunted man. Terrorists are trying to kill him. The police want to arrest him for the stabbing death of his best friend. He doesn't know whose side he's one or who he can trust. With his pursuers closing in on every side, Charlie makes his way back to his hometown to find some answers. There, holed up in an abandoned mansion, he's joined by his friends in a desperate attempt to discover the truth about a murder he can't remember-and the love he can never forget. "A thriller that reads like a teenage version of 24...an adrenaline-pumping adventure." -- TheDailyBeast.com (review of The Last Thing I Remember)
eBookMall recently interviewed Andrew Kalvan. Here is an excerpt:
What is the greatest challenge you have had to overcome in your writing career? "Well, the easiest way to popularity with the reading public is to give them good guys who are all good and bad guys who are all bad; to convince them that the horrors of life — like poverty and war — can be overcome if we just learn to live together or get the right government programs in place; to make righteous action lead to happiness and wicked action lead to misery . . . and of course none of those things is in keeping with reality. My greatest challenge has been offering a vision of human life that's layered and complex and sometimes even tragic in stories that nonetheless are thrilling and have popular appeal. It's hard work!"
Read more on Andrew's author page!