In Baltimore, black reporter Barryl Billups receives an anonymous tip that neo-Nazis are preparing a campaign of terror against African-Americans. A crank call, he assumes, but it turns out for real. A debut in fiction.
In Baltimore, black reporter Barryl Billups receives an anonymous tip that neo-Nazis are preparing a campaign of terror against African-Americans. A crank call, he assumes, but it turns out for real. A debut in fiction.
The son of two Baltimore public school teachers, Blair S. Walker used to entertain himself in elementary school by writing short stories. The practice was frowned upon by instructors who wanted Walker to pay attention in class, not secretly heed his muse. After serving in the Army as a Korean linguist, Walker attended the University of Maryland and worked as an intern reporter with the Baltimore Sun. Hired by the Orlando Sentinel after college, Walker was fired after six months by an editor who disparagingly noted that Walker's writing ability was marginal at best! A former financial writer with USA Today, Walker has been an editor with New York Newsday and the Washington Post, and a newsman with the Associated Press. The author of three novels featuring investigative reporter Darryl Billups, Walker holds a University of Maryland J.D. degree and currently lives in South Florida, where he's pursuing a lifelong dream of learning to fly helicopters.
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