Requirements: ePUB reader, 0.9mb
Overview: Over the years Higgins would write for a number of different publications, including the Boston Globe, the Wall Street Journal, the Boston Herald American, and the Associated Press. This would give him an insight into reporting on crime, which would help him along with his government position as an anti-organized crime figure. Knowing the world inside and out, he would then get down to the gritty details of the people that populated it, showing who they were as real human beings.
Active in the world of law for ten years from 1973, he’d gain an insiders knowledge of the profession quite unlike any other. This would see him on his towards becoming the writer that he currently is to this day, as he would live in Massachusetts for much of his life. Inspiring generations of readers to come, many are still discovering his work to this day, and will do so for many years to come.
Genre: Fiction > Mystery/Thriller
Outlaws (1987)
They were a handful of leftover student radicals from the turbulent 60’s– brilliant renegade children of affluence, financing their reign of urban terror through a series of daring armored car robberies. For nearly a decade they avoided capture, until justice final triumphed in the wake of a brutal mass murder in downtown Boston. But for the killers’ families, the police, the obsessed young Assistant D.A., and the city itself, the nightmare was far from over. . . it had only just begun.
A Change of Gravity (1997)
For Ambrose Merrion, life was first and foremost a matter of people taking care of one another, with society picking up the slack when family and friends weren’t enough. For Danny Hilliard, politics was a matter of gaining and using the power to make sure that society did just that. With Merrion installed as clerk of the court in Canterbury, Massachusetts, shrewdly managing his friend’s campaigns, and Hilliard rising swiftly to chairman of Ways and Means in the Massachusetts House of Representatives, they made an excellent team. But then something went wrong. Hilliard, to Merrion’s dismay, began to play adulterous games, and newspapers soon began to run revealing photos of him with much younger women. His wife was not amused, nor was an overzealous federal prosecutor, who, mistaking righteous vengeance for doing justice, believed he had found an exquisitely ingenious way to put Hilliard away by forcing Merrion to incriminate him. Someone had changed the rules while Ambrose and Danny weren’t looking. The law of political gravity had changed, and what was good, clean wickedness in 1960 had become a felony in 1996.
Download Instructions:
https://ouo.io/6Xy9X8o
Mirror:
https://ouo.io/nt755
https://ouo.io/DPTRwa
https://ouo.io/WjweO2K
Trouble downloading? Read This.