"scintillating action adventure thriller"
Dr. Marion Ford owns Sanibel Biological which sells marine
samples to schools and research laboratories around the
countries. He looks like a nerdy scientist but that is a
cover for he is part of a deep cover operations team.
Members of the group provide its agents with legitimate
and mobile professions. Ford's job collecting marine
samples takes him all over the world, a great cover when
on an assignment. As a favor to a friend he checks on her brother Jobe
Applebee because he hasn't answered the phone for a few
days. Marion sees a woman Dasha beating and torturing
Jobe. Marion chases her and her partner away but
meanwhile the man commits suicide. Guinea worms crawl out
of his body. A cunning criminal, Dr. Desmond Stokes is
letting loose these and other types of exotics so that
property values in the area will drop and he can buy prime
land cheap. He seeks Jake's computer which might have the
cure for the worm infestation. He wants to develop it so
that the world will look at him as a savior while the
clever and strong Dasha has orders to eliminate Ford who
has the computer files and knows who is behind the
loosening of the poisonous exotics on an unsuspecting
state. Randy Wayne White has written a high powered bio-terror
thriller. The action starts during the first chapter and
picks up speed, taking the reader on a roller coaster ride
full of chilling terror. In the wrong hands bio-
terrorists can devastate an area and there is little
anyone can do to stop them until after the mission is
accomplished and the results become known. This is a very
scary novel because it is based on a realistic premise one
that people can't guard against. DEAD OF NIGHT is a
scintillating action adventure thriller. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted March 10, 2005
SummaryLater, my conscience would play the inevitable game of
"What if . . ." What if I had stopped by Jobe's home on
Friday morning instead of Sunday night? What if I hadn't
interrupted the two people who were alternately
interrogating and beating him? Would he have lived? Or would
he have died? And what would have happened then?
It started when Doc Ford got a call from his old friend
Frieda Matthews; her reclusive biologist brother, Jobe,
wasn't answering the phone-could Doc check up on him? Ford
can't think of a reason not to, but soon he will think of a
hundred. Not only will it be one of the worst scenes he has
ever encountered, the consequences will draw him into the
heart of a nightmare. A catastrophe is coming to Florida,
and just maybe there is something Ford can do about it-but
he doesn't know how or where or when . . . or even if he is
already too late.
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