How can anyone credibly claim that the Nuremberg rules no longer apply when a 97-year-old woman, Irmgard Furchner, was recently convicted for her role in the murders of thousands of people? She was only a secretary in one of the…
#Political Thrillers
Thrillers with political subjects
Nuremberg Rules Remain in Effect
Recent Reuters headline: “former concentration camp secretary, 97, convicted of Nazi war crimes.” As the result of a criminal trial that was delayed in September 2021 when Irmgard Furchner went on the run, she was later given a two-year suspended…
More than Sharply Worded Letters
Every day, however frustrating, we learn more about the evil people who created and managed the phony plandemic that killed and maimed millions while they got rich beyond imagination. Frustration comes from the fact there’s much talking and writing about…
The Next Logical Step
My third novel, “Criminal Opera,” was published on November 22, 2024; it begins in a relatively light manner: “Returning from his run over the Roeliff Jansen Kill and up the hill in the pelting rain, David Garvey saw a postal…
“Criminal Opera” in the Publisher’s Hands
“Criminal Opera” is about applying the Nuremberg punishments to people and companies that organized and managed what some call Covid 19 but others call the plandemic or the scamdemic. Because they caused a multitude of unnecessary deaths and lingering debilitating…
Terror on 39th Street
During late evening at Judge Elyse Moravent’s home in “Criminal Opera (coming soon):” “As David tried to slip back into slumber, holding Elyse closely, he began to dream of looking for his home in a decrepit commercial neighborhood of an…
A Pleasant Event in “Criminal Opera”
A happy evening in “Criminal Opera (coming very soon):” “David Garvey smoothly opened the door of Elyse’s cab as it pulled up in front of the il Vagabondo Italian restaurant on East 62nd Street in Manhattan. He reached ahead to…
Relieving some Tension
As “Stepping on Fingers” unfolds, saving Lea: “Despite some closure from disposing of Judge Beckinsale, Lea remained concerned about the explosive device embedded in her neck and the amulet between her breasts. It was supposed to fool the bomb about…
Escaping Lea’s Minder
In “Stepping on Fingers,” Lea takes action to save herself in a New Hampshire church where she and Drak were staying. “A sudden calm enveloped Lea. Her attention was drawn back to the large, heavy, circular floor polisher. Its three-pronged…
Escaping from Russia through Finland
Early in “Stepping on Fingers,” Lea is surrounded by her two minders as their train stops at the Russian-Finnish border: “As Lea listened intently to the Russian border guards clomping slowly toward them through the next carriage, Willy snuggled against…