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Bonnie''s job - cleaning up after violent homicides - is not for the faint hearted. But for Bonnie it''s a business she has built from the ground up; a service that she can be proud of. By day she sells make-up under her rather too amorous boss, a strange but necessary contrast to her gruesome night job. Working two jobs isn''t easy, but with a husband like Duke, an unemployed drunk, she needs the money. Blood soaked carpets and bullet holed plaster work might have become the norm, but when she notices a connection between a spate of senseless murders in which people inexplicably kill their loved ones, her tough exterior starts to crack. The links she sees sound crazy even to her, and can only be explained by the supernatural.Winner of the Mystery Writers of America Edgar Allan Poe award 2003>
About the author
Graham Masterton (born 1946, Edinburgh) is a British horror author. Originally editor of Mayfair and the British edition of Penthouse, Graham Masterton's first novel
The Manitou was published in 1976 and adapted for the film in 1978
.Further works garnered critical acclaim, including a Special Edgar award by the Mystery Writers of America for
Charnel House and a Silver Medal by the West Coast Review of Books for
Mirror. He is also the only non-French winner of the prestigious Prix Julia Verlanger for his novel
Family Portrait, an imaginative reworking of the Oscar Wilde novel
The Picture of Dorian Gray.
Masterton's novels often contain visceral sex and horror. In addition to his novels, Masterton has written a number of sex instruction books, including
How To Drive Your Man Wild In Bed and
Wild Sex for New Lovers.
Visit www.grahammasterton.co.uk