In The Committee, world-famous author Raymond Buckland brings his writing talents to the world of fiction for a rip-roaring tale of espionage, parapsychology, and an attempt to conquer the U.S.
The Cold War may be over for most of us, but wh...
Alec Chambers is in a quandry - his bookstore had been broken into, his storekeeper killed, and everything points to the man behind the mayhem being one of his best customers, Mr. Mathers.
But when a very special journal is stolen from his o...
Fierce hurricanes, ruinous tornadoes, and flooding rains are sweeping the United States, costing thousands of lives and billions of dollars. As it becomes clear that these eerily violent and frequent storms are unnatural, the Committee (a cover group...
FIRST IN A NEW SERIES Bram Stoker, business manager for London's Lyceum Theatre, always expects the supernatural to be lurking around the corner. But investigating the murder of a cast member might be enough to make even him lose his head... "1...
In London during the bombing of the early days of World War Two, a brave young nurse is trained to become one of Winston Churchill’s “Secret Circle” " a select group of spies who report only to him. Kirsteen Craig is trained to go into Occupi...
Bram Stoker, business manager for London's Lyceum Theatre, is never surprised to find the supernatural waiting in the wings--especially when a chilling murder appears to have origins in the occult... March 1881. The Lyceum is abuzz with the news t...
The third in the Bram Stoker Mysteries series, applauded in Publishers Weekly, Kirkus Reviews, RT Book Reviews and others. In this book London's Lyceum Theatre sees the death (Accident? Suicide? Murder?) of one of its top actors, while a figure taken...
Prince Honoré, a talented Spiritualist medium, bursts upon the scene and becomes the idol of London Society. But at one of the prince's séances, a sitter is murdered. Bertie Hawkins is called in to investigate and checks on the backgrounds of all t...
In Victorian London, in 1886, Bertie Hawkins worked on the presses of "The Morning Post" for a number of years but lost his job when that tabloid was absorbed by a larger newspaper. Bertie was always interested in reading reports of the Metropolitan ...