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Ancient magic. Modern vengeance. Everyone on the Navajo Reservation thinks Danny Riley is a witch. Maybe they're right. His enemies have a nasty habit of catching fire or disappearing into the desert. Coincidence? Bad luck? Danny never believed in magic-until he fled the Rez to escape a death sentence and started wondering if the stories were true. Oklahoma City was supposed to be a fresh start. Instead, a stranger hands him a wad of cash. A girl he's never met claims to be his wife. And a bloodthirsty dwarf is hunting him over something called Cherokee Ice. Now, with killers closing in and…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Ancient magic. Modern vengeance. Everyone on the Navajo Reservation thinks Danny Riley is a witch. Maybe they're right. His enemies have a nasty habit of catching fire or disappearing into the desert. Coincidence? Bad luck? Danny never believed in magic-until he fled the Rez to escape a death sentence and started wondering if the stories were true. Oklahoma City was supposed to be a fresh start. Instead, a stranger hands him a wad of cash. A girl he's never met claims to be his wife. And a bloodthirsty dwarf is hunting him over something called Cherokee Ice. Now, with killers closing in and nowhere left to run, Danny has one choice: embrace the Indian magic he's spent his life denying. Because the legends are real-and if he doesn't learn their power fast, he won't live long enough to become one. From award-winning author John T. Biggs, Cherokee Ice is a gripping, genre-bending thriller of myth, identity, and survival that will keep you spellbound until the last page.
Autorenporträt
Everything John T. Biggs writes is so full of Oklahoma that once you read it, you'll never get the red dirt stains washed out of your mind. The tribes play a significant role. No authentic discussion of the state is possible without them. Traditional Native American legends are reworked and set in the modern era, the way oral historians always intended.One of John's stories, "Boy Witch" took grand prize in the 80th annual Writer's Digest Competition in 2011. Another won third prize in the 2011 Lorian Hemingway short story contest. Eighty of his short stories have been published in one form or another, along with several of his novels.