When Martin Lawrence starts his journey of recovery from alcoholism he is not on his own. He has a supportive family and a team of professionals to help him. But he also has a host of painful memories, stretches of time he can remember nothing about...
CIA AGENT MICAH. DALTON is a "cleaner" He takes care of other agents' mistakes. And he is very good at his job. But when a friend and mentor appears to have committed a grotesque suicide, Dalton's investigation leads him into the snare of a madman...
Imagine your dreams are shattered when the words, “Our beloved President John F. Kennedy is dead,” come crackling over a PA system in your boyhood classroom. And imagine nearly forty years later, you feel your Manhattan building wobble beneath yo...
CIA cleaner Micah Dalton returns for another go-round of international espionage, government cover-ups, and high-intensity pursuit that has cemented this series in the best of spy fiction. The Orpheus Deception opens with a breathtaking assassina...
Deception in the CIA, historical intrigue, and blood in the streets--Micah Dalton returns in the stunning new novel by the New York Times-bestselling author. W inter in Venice and a killing frost has cut deep into CIA cleaner Micah Dalton?s heart ...
In Vienna for a top-secret meeting with ex-Mossad agent Issadore Galan, Micah Dalton senses that something is very wrong on the streets of the Ring District. Dalton's aggressive response to enemy surveillance makes him the target of a complex plot wi...
Traveling Without A Passport is a sequel to top selling "The Garden of What Was and Was Not." Peter Peter McCarthy, a "non-repentant hippie," continues on his adventures in disappointing later realities. The focus is now on a cataclysmic period in th...
The adventurous cats first met in Travels With George: Paris are back, and this time, they are seeing the hometown sights in New York City. George tells his tale from his cat's eye perspective as he and Billy explore Central Park, take a borat...
The New England Journal of Medicine would sell more magazines with Doctor Caroline O'Reilly's picture on the cover. She's a rising star in trauma surgery at Massachusetts General Hospital. At five-foot-ten with red hair and green eyes she can look...
In The Messes I Made While You Were Waiting For Godot, Peter McCarthy brings the characters, themes and ideas he's carried through The Garden Of What Was And Was Not and Traveling Without A Passport to a conclusion of sorts. Readers of his earlier...
Have you ever pondered the lowest point in Western Civilization? In this novel, Peter McCarthy, first person narrator of three previous books, proposes one, and it's alarmingly close to now. McCarthy also explains why being born with a calling may be...
Fusible Links is the story of love found and lost, of the struggles of a generation scarred by the assassination of John F. Kennedy, not yet set free by the rise of the counterculture. In a dark period seldom examined, a sort of lost valley, Peter Mc...
It's 1975. The Bicentennial of a country in turmoil edges toward the horizon, and Peter McCarthy has extended a thread started in the the hippie counterculture as far as it can be stretched.
The shallow identity he patched together to survive with...
All his life, he wondered about a witch next door, a witch his brothers both scared him with and protected him from. When his family life collapsed in miserable divorce, he confronted his fear of the witch and found what he dreaded even more. The Wit...
On the day I came home from the war -- a phrase still tossed around like iceberg lettuce in the cultural salad, in spite of its saturation -- the shock was not unexpected. Both the country that sent me and a million others into battle across the ...
In "Lucky To Have Her," Peter wrestles with understanding the paths his life has worn, adjusting after his wife's death. No longer protected by the buffer of a long marriage, he faces up to compromises made early and how they directed his fate. But h...
Because it lasted only seven months, the Franco-Prussian War has sometimes been ignored by historians and yet it merits study for the fact that it was the first deployment of a ruthlessly efficient and superbly organised German Army, a phenomenon tha...