Author: Andrew Mayne
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About the Author
Andrew Mayne is the Wall Street Journal top of the line creator of The Naturalist, Looking Glass, Murder Theory, Dark Pattern, and Angel Killer; an Edgar Award is chosen one for Black Fall in his Jessica Blackwood arrangement; and the star of Discovery Channel's Shark Week extraordinary Andrew Mayne: Ghost Diver and A&E's Don't Trust Andrew Mayne. He is likewise an entertainer who began his first world visit as an illusionist when he was a youngster and proceeded to work off-camera for Penn and Teller, David Blaine, and David Copperfield. Positioned as the fifth top rated autonomous creator of the year by Amazon UK, Andrew at present has the Weird Things digital broadcast.
Review of Book
The girl is Sloan McPherson, one among an extended line of McPherson's and, herself, a member of the local department. She is diving, alone, during a shallow a part of the water, trying to find rocks for her professor when somebody dumps a body in her lap.
This causes the local police to lose their shit while their senior, federal, brethren run imaginary laps as well—after all, this was a McPherson and everybody knows they’re trouble…Sloan is forced to play along and when she is attacked by two men, they take the entire story with a grain of salt. She is disbelieved, looked down upon, and, eventually, loses her job.
Then an unusual thing happens—somebody believes her! in fact, it's George Solar, a person her family has long hated for his work against her uncle. But Sloane knows that the majority of what was said about her uncle was true—besides, Solar strikes her as quite an unclean cop. He explains to her that they really after a cache of documents held by a drug smuggler which she is now a major suspect.
Sloane is, quite naturally, upset by this—she has no idea who that guy is and no hint of a thought where he's. Solar accepts this and explains that the DIA is involved, pulling money from the Florida drug market and using it themselves, they’ve become the person during this scenario and therefore the people really after her. To free her, they need to seek out the documents.
Obviously, the need some power—before long provided by the Governor who appears to acknowledge Solar's assertion—he makes A unique unit, the UIU, and makes Solar the head. Together, Solar and McPherson go searching for a diminutive person submarine that was conveying plunder and another thing from South America to South Florida.
Discovering it will get the DIA away from them and let them put the genuine trouble maker s in prison.
In the long run, they do discover the vessel and the papers they're searching for (just as 20 million in real money). They should simply remain alive long enough to get the proof home…
THE GIRL BENEATH THE SEA is a pleasantly plotted story with an astounding consummation. It is planned as the first in an arrangement and makes a fine showing of setting up individuals for future books. George Solar has much more information in his and Sloan's ex, Run, is loaded with potential outcomes. THE GIRL BENEATH THE SEA isn't fine wine, however, it has a decent flavor and will replay a couple of long stretches of perusing.
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