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Thursday, April 17, 2014

Bad Karma in the Big Easy by DJ Donaldson


Best-Selling Author Serves Up Creole And Crime With
Bad Karma In The Big Easy! 

Astor + Blue Editions is proud to present a heart-pounding new thriller by D.J. Donaldson, Bad Karma in The Big Easy! Available at all major book retailers (ISBN: paperback 979-1-938231-32-2, ePUB 978-1-938231-30-8, ePDF 978-1-938231-31-5; Mystery, Thriller; paperback $12.99, ebook $5.99).

Best-selling mystery author D.J. Donaldson (New Orleans RequiemLouisiana Fever) invites readers back to the Bayou with his latest New Orleans adventure Bad Karma in the Big Easy.Plump and proud medical examiner Andy Broussard reunites with gorgeous psychologist Kit Franklyn as they face off with their most gruesome foe yet.

A killer lurks in The Big Easy, his victims found among the many bodies left in the wake of the devastating Hurricane Katrina. But with the city’s records destroyed, and the police force in complete disarray, Broussard must take matters into his own hands. Soon, he and his courageous sidekick, Kit, find themselves on a dangerous and labyrinthine journey through the storm-ravaged underbelly of the ever-mysterious and intensely seductive city of New Orleans; leading them to a predatory evil the likes of which they’ve never encountered.

Written in his uniquely brusque style, Donaldson’s Bad Karmacombines hard-hitting, action-packed prose with a folksy, sweetly Southern charm. Add Donaldson’s brilliant first-hand knowledge of forensics and the sultry flavor of New Orleans, and the result is a first class forensic procedural within an irresistibly delectable mystery that will leave fans hungry for more.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Don is a retired professor of Anatomy and Neurobiology.  His entire academic career was spent at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center, where he published dozens of papers on wound healing and taught microscopic anatomy to over 5,000 medical and dental students.  He is also the author of seven published forensic mysteries and five medical thrillers. He lives in Memphis, Tennessee with his wife and two West Highland Terriers.  In the spring of most years he simply cannot stop buying new flowers and other plants for the couple’s backyard garden.

PRAISE FOR D.J. DONALDSON

“D.J. Donaldson is superb at spinning medical fact into gripping suspense.  With his in-depth knowledge of science and medicine, he is one of very few authors who can write with convincing authority.”
– Tess Gerritsen, NY Times best-selling author of the Rizzoli & Isles novels
"With each book, Donaldson peels away a few more layers of these characters and we find ourselves loving the involvement."
– THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL (MEMPHIS)
“Donaldson has established himself as a master of the Gothic mystery.”
– BOOKLIST

WHAT CRITCS SAY ABOUT LOUSIANA FEVER

"Delivers...genuinely heart-stopping suspense."
– PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
"Broussard tracks the virus…with a winning combination of common sense and epidemiologic legerdemain."
 – NEW ORLEANS TIMES PICAYUNE
"This series has carved a solid place for itself.  Broussard makes a terrific counterpoint to the Dave Robicheaux ragin' Cajun school of mystery heroes."
– BOOKLIST
"A dazzling tour de force...sheer pulse-pounding reading excitement."
– THE CLARION LEDGER (JACKSON, MS)
 "The autopsies are detailed enough to make Patricia Cornwell fans move farther south for their forensic fixes...splendidly eccentric local denizens, authentic New Orleans and bayou backgrounds...a very suspenseful tale.”
– LOS ANGELES TIMES
"Keep(s) the reader on the edge of his chair and likely to finish in one sitting."
– BENTON COURIER (ARKANSAS)

WHAT CRITICS SAY ABOUT NEW ORLEANS REQUIEM

“Lots of Louisiana color, pinpoint plotting and two highly likable characters…smart, convincing solution.”
– PUBLISHERS WEEKLY (starred review)
“An…accomplished forensic mystery.  His New Orleans is worth the trip.”
– NEW ORLEANS TIMES PICAYUNE
“The tension will keep even the most reluctant young adult readers turning the pages…”
– SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL   

WHAT CRITICS SAY ABOUT SLEEPING WITH THE CRAWFISH

"Action-packed, cleverly plotted topnotch thriller. Another fine entry in a consistently outstanding series. "
– BOOKLIST
"With each book, Donaldson peels away a few more layers of these characters and we find ourselves loving the involvement."
– THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL (MEMPHIS)
"The pace is pell-mell."
– SAN ANTONIO EXPRESS-NEWS
"Exciting and…realistic. Donaldson...starts his action early and sustains it until the final pages."
– BENTON COURIER (Arkansas)
"A roller-coaster ride…Thoroughly enjoyable."
– BRAZOSPORT FACTS
"The latest outing of a fine series which never disappoints."
– MERITORIOUS MYSTERIES

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(Portly & Proud) Andy Broussard Mysteries

All titles are available for $.99 on Amazon right now!
____________________________

BOOK EXCERPT

They reached the store’s kicked-in front door a few seconds later. Flashlight on, Broussard went in first, Kit following closely.

Inside the store, they played their flashlight beams around the dank interior. At first they saw nothing but mud-caked floorboards and walls pockmarked with starbursts of mold, then Kit’s light picked up a chain hanging from the ceiling. Following it up, she saw it was attached to a large screw eye. Walking her beam back down the rope, she discovered a large metal hook on the other end. By now, Broussard was looking at it, too.

“What do you suppose that was used for?” Kit said.

“Hangin’ somethin’.”

“What?”

But Broussard had already turned away to see what else might be found. His light located some twisted chrome rods and a pair of loose wheels that together, were probably once a rolling wardrobe trolley. It didn’t take much detective work to arrive at that conclusion because the chrome wreckage was lying on a clot of muddy clothing. With Kit supplementing his light with hers, Broussard walked over to the clothes, knelt, and began pulling at the matted, muddy mess to see what kind of clothes they were.

The first piece to come free was apparently a dress. He reached down and worked another edge free.

A much brighter light than either of the ones they carried suddenly blasted them from the doorway. They both turned to see who was there.

“Look,” a mocking voice said. “Looters. I don’t think there’s a lower form of humanity than people who would take advantage of a catastrophe for personal gain. We should instruct them and set them on a better path.”

“The woman’s a major babe,” a second voice said.

With the light shining in her eyes, it was hard to see through it, but Kit thought there were only two of them.

Were they carrying guns? She couldn’t tell. If she reached for hers and pointed it at them, the natural response would be for them to start shooting. If she was going to produce the Ladysmith, better to just start blasting away with it. But what if they weren’t armed? And maybe they’re just kids. Could she live with killing an unarmed kid? Damn it.

The two moved inside. The one with the light shifted it onto Broussard. “What are you dressed up for old man, Halloween?” the second voice said. “Couldn’t you afford a real tie?”  

“I’m the medical examiner,” Broussard said. “I do a lot of my work bendin’ over examinin’ the dead. I found early in my career that a long tie gets in the way. Kind of like what you’re doin’ right now.”
With the light out of her face, Kit played her own light over the two so she could see their hands.

“Ohhh, get him,” the second thug said. 

“He ain’t scared. But you oughtta be old man.”

The thug slipped his hand into his pocket and brought out an object. There was a snicking sound and Kit’s light caught the glint of a knife blade. She saw no guns.

Before she could reach for the Ladysmith, she was grabbed in a bear hug from behind, pinning her arms. Her flashlight clattered to the floor. 
Instinctively, she threw her head back, hoping to drive her skull into her captor’s face, but he must have been expecting that because he moved his head to the side.

“Your hair smells great,” he said breathing into her ear. “I’ll bet your pussy smells even better.”

His breath curled around to the front of her face and went into her nose. Though the odor in the store was bad, his breath was worse. One of his hands slid down between her legs and his fingers began probing.

She stamped on his right foot as hard as she could. But her soft deck shoes didn’t have any effect. She drove her left foot back into his kneecap. That didn’t accomplish anything either. Running out of options, she leaned into him and drove herself backward. He gave ground and they began to move, slowly at first, then faster as she continued to dig in. They hit the back wall a moment later with a thud. She heard the air rush out of him, but he didn’t loosen his hold.

The guy with the knife advanced on Broussard.

“He likes unusual ties,” the guy with the light said. “Cut his throat and pull his tongue through the opening. See how that suits him.”

Kit watched with horror. They were both in trouble, but it was Broussard she was worried about. They were going to kill him and she couldn’t do anything about it. If she could just get free for a second... She struggled in the grip of the geek holding her, but he was too strong.

Broussard shoved his flashlight into his back pocket. Fists raised, he edged forward in a crouch to meet the guy with the knife. The thug moved in closer, his hands making circling motions, trying to confuse Broussard about the direction the attack would come. He lunged.

With surprising quickness, Broussard knocked the knife hand to the side with his left hand. He took a step forward and brought his right fist around in a looping motion that caught the thug hard on the side of the head. Stunned, the thug staggered sideways, turned, and fell on his ass. But he didn’t drop the knife.

“I could be wrong, but I think you missed him, Chato,” the guy with the light said. 
“Try again.”

Chato got awkwardly to his feet. Grinding his teeth and growling, he charged again. This time he swung the knife from Broussard’s left to his right in a huge underhand slicing motion. Broussard leaned back so the knife barely missed his face. He grabbed the thug’s arm and used the momentum of the guy’s charge to spin him around. Broussard then sent him sprawling onto the floor with a kick in the glutes.

The guy with the light played the beam over his embarrassed lackey, then turned it back onto Broussard. “You’re not an easy mark, I’ll say that for you, old man. And I’ve enjoyed your performance. But now it’s time you were dead…”  



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