See What I Thought of. . .
The Darkest Secret
With everything that Walsh
Ritter has been through, it’s no wonder he longs for a change of pace. That
change of pace needs to be somewhere new. Somewhere fresh and different.
He gets new and different
alright. . .
Only, not in the way he expected.
**********
Walsh Ritter had sailed for
England on the ship, the Belinda Lynn, and was found upside down, nearly dead,
and with the lifeboats nowhere to be seen. None of the crew had been spotted.
It had left San Francisco three day earlier but encountered bad weather.
Walsh awakes on an island where everything is
different and bizarre compared to everything else he has ever known.
Scrambling, he used his skills to finally find water and some hope for survival.
A sudden pain and all goes black.
Walsh no longer takes pleasure in killing, but
neither is he bothered by it. He finds he has grown dark and numb, satisfied to
simply exist as long as there is no one else around for him to hurt. He becomes
accustomed to the knowledge that he will never live anywhere else but this
island and will never again know human contact and begins to believe that it is
for the best for everyone if that is so.
**********
Yes, life certainly takes a
turn for Walsh. Marooned on an island full of prisoners and unable to speak, he
has to tread very carefully to survive. But if there’s one thing Ritter knows
how to do, it’s survive!
But there’s more to life than
the drudgery of mere existence.
Now, it’s difficult to talk
about this particular story without going into specifics. Alas, those specifics
would give too much of the plot away. Something you need to do for yourselves
by reading the book. So. . .
Despite his best intentions,
Ritter is once again forced to face a moral dilemma. To kill, or not to kill.
Doing so freely make take him further along a path that leads to darkness.
However, if he sticks to his newfound principles in a situation like this,
he’ll most definitely end up dead.
So, what does he do?
Entertain us! That’s what, in
a profoundly brutal way. Yes, Ritter is a survivor. And like it or not, he’ll
do what it takes to ensure he not only escapes, but makes it back to
civilization.
But it’ll take grit. Determination.
Choices. Things he’ll do with you at his side, for the tenor of this story
snares you from the outset; involves you; makes things personal. And that’s
what I enjoy about Jeff Crawford’s writing. He makes his characters instantly
relatable so you can immerse yourselves in the adventure, and discover for yourself
what it would take to make it safely away from a place that has seen the death
of so many.
The Gun Hand series: A truly
excellent adventure.
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