Pete Morin has been a trial attorney, a politician, a bureaucrat, a lobbyist, and an observant witness to human behavior. He has combined them all in his debut novel, Diary of a Small Fish. It is today’s Wednesday book feature on Amlokiblogs.
Of this book, Michael Davidson, Newmarket, VA says: “Morin asks the question, just what exactly
is “influence peddling?” When do the rules become so vague and
subjective that they can be used against anybody at the whim of people
with power? This theme provides the back beat to the story’s frothy
narration and renders the novel more than an entertainment. This one
will make you think for a long time after you’ve read the final page.”
So now you know what to expect.
Elevator pitch: Paul Forte
didn’t think eating osso buco could be a federal crime – but his
prosecutor is bent on settling an old family score, and he’s not above
breaking the law to do it.
Judge Charles Wheeler would call in the jury of fifteen people, instruct them
about how things work, and then he would invite Bernard Kilroy to give an
opening statement. What I imagined vividly as a perversion of that opening
statement ran through my head on a closed loop from about noon on, and by two in the morning, I’d been spinning like a top in bed for four hours,
annoying Shannon to beat the band.
I slid out of bed and went down to the futon, rolled
it out in front of the window and grabbed the throw pillows and puff from the
couch. I lay on my back and watched the stars move across the purple-black sky.
I thought about Mom and Dad, and about Kate. I thought about the times I’d
spent on the golf course that brought me to this point. I tried hard to think
about sex, so maybe I could get some sleep, but it didn’t work. In a waking
trance, I heard the soft padding of feet on wood, and Shannon’s naked body
suddenly appeared in a silhouetted apparition between the window and me.
“There’s only one way you’re going to get any
sleep, and I aim to make it happen.”
The black shadow began to sink.
“Do you think the flush will leave my cheeks
before the jury sees me?”
—–
Hmmm, that looks a good read to me.
Good review dear. See you again 🙂
Sounds awesome. I like the title too.
All the best!
Nas
This seems like a pretty cool book! I would definitely read this.
http://www.modernworld4.blogspot.com
Hi folks,
Thanks for the nice comments, you've made my day.
The cover was done by an old friend from high school who I ran into on Facebook. We used to play rock and roll in the mid 70's. I knew he was an artist, so I asked him if he'd done any book covers. He said, "no, not really – I've done a few for Random House, and I have a Time magazine cover." He walked me through a fascinating series of questions and soon sent a sketch of the man on the hook with the whipping tie. We added the briefcase and…
Cha-ching!
(He did the Time cover of Monica Lewinsky as the Mona Lisa)
Thank you, Damyanti, for this and all you do for indie writers.
Cheers to you all.
Loved that elevator pitch- would definitely read this.
That's a great title! And I agree the excerpt has a Grisham vibe. 🙂
The title is a clever play on words.
"Frothy narration" … love that! Great cover too! Once I get my debut squared away I'd love to have you feature it. Thanks for offering! 🙂
Ha! Great excerpt. Sounds like a Grisham book for grownups 🙂
Oh my goodness, I love the title! Whew! Pure genius.
Sounds pretty awesome, Damyanti–thanks for sharing! Will add this to my (already overflowing) Goodreads TBR pile.