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About the Book:
Jimmy Smit was born and raised on a dairy farm in Modesto, California,
learning at an early age that hard work would be rewarded with
strength and agility beyond his years. One summer evening, Jimmy was
releasing the last set of cows into the field and heard a soft swoosh
of wind above his head. He looked up and noticed a large bat circling
near the rafters. He paid little attention to it, but as he turned to
lock the wooden gate, the bat swooped down and landed on the tender
nape of his neck. He tried to swat it away, but it sank its sharp
fangs deep into his flesh. Jimmy screamed with pain and flailed his
arms until the bat released him and flew toward the rising moon. He
ran to the farmhouse for help, but his parents had gone to town and
didn’t see the tears running down his pale face. The pain faded, and
Jimmy forgot about the incident, but he soon began to lose his vision
and was forced to wear glasses. Most of the high school student body
treated him with the utmost respect, but he heard two blonde-haired
cheerleaders giggle and whisper “four eyes.” The verbal wound festered
and remained inside of his dark heart forever.
At twenty-one, Jimmy moved to a small apartment in San Francisco. He
obtained a job at the local Y Mart store and soon became the
supervisor of the graveyard shift. He was placed in charge of a small
crew that was responsible for restocking the empty shelves with a
variety of sharp hunting knives. . . .
About the Author:
According to the
author, he was flushed out of his mother’s womb with a quill pen
gripped tightly in his slippery left hand. Everyone in the delivery
room quickly concluded that he was a natural born writer. At the ripe
age of nine months, his auntie left him unattended on the kitchen
counter top, allowing him to roll off the counter and slam his frail
little skull onto the hardwood floor. This has given him a legitimate
excuse for any brainless actions or filthy words that mistakenly flew
out of his mouth.
When he tried to write
with his left hand at age five, his mother spanked his little
posterior with a willow switch until it resembled the reddish hue of a
baboon’s ass. His mother’s disciplinary actions continued until he
finally obeyed her wishes and began to write in cursive with his shaky
right hand.
Older now, the author
has developed a growing contempt for loud noises and rude people.
Pondering the inevitable, it’s his best assumption that he’ll have a
smooth transition from dementia into senility. Real love has
continued to elude his lonely heart, so he’s spun all of his adoration
and colored dreams into the characters of this murder mystery. He
hopes this twisted red yarn makes you smile. |