A global conspiracy threatens to overthrow governments, to topple
nations, and to create a new order. Caught in the middle of their machinations, Jake Monday, vaunted assassin for the Galbriath Alliance, stands between global tyranny and personal purgatory. Follow Jake through three novellas, Manic Monday, A Month of Mondays, and Thank God
it's Monday and track the chronicles of his struggle to discover the man
he was, the killer he has become and the man he wants to be. Now, the
first three books of The Jake Monday Chronicles are all in one book.
Save money and get The Monday Collection today.
The Monday Collection includes:
MANIC MONDAY
A MONTH OF MONDAYS
THANK GOD ITS MONDAY
Look for more Jake Monday Chronicles early 2014 as his saga continues!
FROM THE AUTHOR
The Monday Collection, Volume One is a special volume of the first three books of the Jake Monday Chronicles. It includes: Manic Monday, A Month of Mondays, and Thank God it's Monday.
The Monday Collection, Volume Two will be released in the fourth quarter of 2014 and will include the final four parts of the Jake Monday story: Rainy Days and Mondays (March 2014), Can't Wait for Monday (May 2014), Mad Mad Monday (July 2014), and Monday Bloody Monday (September 2014).
The
Jake Monday Chronicles began when I wrote a short story about an assassin named Jake Monday. I had no plans, really, but I had a sentence running through my head. The sentence that launched this series began: "Jake Monday hated Mondays more than any other day of the week."
The
idea that a high-profile assassin would be unhappy, unsatisfied, and struggling with his past and future, is not new. I wanted to explore new areas of this theme. I thought of family, of a past hidden, of the
moral challenge of an individual that finds himself caught in a massive
global conspiracy while grappling with the choices he has made,
willingly or not.
So, Jake Monday is my Jason Bourne. Hallie is
my Sidney Bristow (from Alias). My villains...well, they are all my own.
I love to draw villains who are deep, believable, and scary. Not
because they always represent the antithesis of the hero, but just the
opposite: my villains are not much different than all of us. I do not
believe in "grey areas," but I do believe the line between good and evil
can be narrow. One wrong move and even someone like Jake Monday can be
heading in the wrong direction.