Steps has a kind of synesthesia where he can see the ‘essence’ of a person–what he calls ‘shine’–on everything they’ve touched.īrought in to track the driver through a dense forest after the bloodhounds have lost his trail, Steps and his partner Jimmy find the driver laughing maniacally, babbling about souls, and hiding a pristinely maintained box of eight posed rats. Known for his ability to find and follow trails over any surface, Steps is called in on cases that require his unparalleled skills. Magnus “Steps” Craig is part of the elite three-man Special Tracking Unit of the FBI. The best tracker in the world, a man with a secret and a special set of skills, must find two nearly untraceable killers before time runs out for their victims, in Spencer Kope’s Shadows of the Dead.Ī woman-abducted and found in the trunk of a car after a high-speed chase–regains consciousness in the ICU to reveal two crucial pieces of information: the man who kidnapped her is not the same as the man who left her in the woods, and she’s not the first victim–in fact, she is number eight. What about you, reader of Criminal Element? Which book on your bookshelf if one of your prized possessions? Let me know in the comments! It was book 409 of the “Second Chance at Love” series. You’ve never heard of Steffie Hall? What about Janet Evanovich? Well, Hero at Large was her first novel. One such exception is Hero at Large by the legendary Steffie Hall. I generally collect only hardbacks, but there are exceptions. In the end, Rex Collings, a one-man publishing house in London, agreed to publish the book and the rest is history.
The book was rejected by eighteen publishers who thought that the adventures of a bunch of clever rabbits wouldn’t interest readers. printing, not the much more difficult to find U.K. My copy of Watership Down is a first U.S. Not worth the $7,000-$8000 that a first printing would bring, but still a valuable book. My copy of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory is a third printing, based on the subtle changes of the images inside the book. I believe my version is a second printing, though such things can sometimes be difficult to sort out. Jaws by Peter Benchley is a good example. Some of my books are not first printings but are early printings of rare books. The self-published version is on the left, and the later Pocket Books edition is on the right. Martin, Deja Dead by Kathy Reichs, Killing Floor by Lee Child, and two signed first printings of Vince Flynn’s extremely rare debut novel, Term Limits, which he self-published before it was picked up by Pocket Books and became a wild success, launching his career. Others among my collection are first printings of Brad Thor’s debut, The Lions of Lucerne, Gregor the Overlander by Suzanne Collins (before she wrote The Hunger Games), Dying of the Light by George R.R. I have a first edition, first printing of The Hunt for Red October, Tom Clancy’s debut novel, and one of only five thousand in existence (though that number is probably considerably diminished since shipbound sailors comprised many of the first readers). In particular, I love debut novels because they show the author’s earliest published work-sometimes their best. Since that wonderful Christmas morning forty-three years ago, I’ve added considerably to my collection-building many bookshelves along the way.
It’s one of the few things I have left from my childhood, and it’s traveled halfway around the world with me. It may not be worth as much as some of its brothers and sisters on the shelf, but its value is beyond dollars. To this day, that boxed book is the pinnacle of my collection. The container was almost as magnificent as the prose within. Seeing this book with its rich red leather and gilded letters-I never knew a book could look so good. I was thirteen at the time and had read the entire trilogy at least once each year for the proceeding three years-but those had been checked out from the school library. It was sometime on the morning of December 25, 1977, for it was that Christmas that I tore open the wrapping paper to find a leatherbound, boxed edition of the Lord of the Rings trilogy. Unlike most book collectors, I know the exact year, month, and day that I started my collection.