Harvey Barker
is an assassin on the trail of the trustees of the Valentine Trust determined to avenge the death of his sister.
He kills through the use of feng shui - the placing of furniture to create negative karma.
DC Amanda Morgan
is investigating a suicide and other bizarre accidents, following a trail that makes no sense,
but that keeps turning up bodies.
Feng Shui
With knowledge and wisdom ch'i can be used for beneficial and fortuitous practice.
But there are some for whom ch'i is used for a darker purpose . . .
Feng Shui Assassin
Karma kills!
Feng Shui Assassin was independently published with the highest professional standards in mind. However,
self publishing has a terrible reputation because, well, most self-published fiction is terrible.
Rarely have I come across a rollicking good read that was self-published. It's a sad fact that self publishing is (was?)
usually the route to print after a boxfull of rejections slips.
There are some very good exceptions to the rule, though - and a battle is raging to improve standards
and become accepted.
Standard publishing has provided a Cerberus to guard between the wannabe author and the reader - allowing for a
filtering system to sift through the chaff and let only the ripest of wheat to fall through and become published,
ready to grace the shelves of Waterstone's or the Independent Bookstore.
Agents, Editors and the Publishers themselves all have a quality control to ensure that any book published by them
is of a high standard and worthy of the RRP. It is a business - and they succeed or fail by the amount of books they can sell.