The Apostle Murders

Pinned on June 29, 2013 at 11:00 pm by Harold Daniels

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The Apostle Murders
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Reverend Samuel (Preach) Preston is a full-time Christian evangelist traveling the country preaching the gospel of Jesus Christ. But Preach is on a mission – a mission to re-create the martyrdom of the original apostles of Jesus Christ. To his family he is father and grandfather. To the Christian world, he is a dedicated man of God. But to FBI agents Duncan Morris, Lynn Keller, and George Benjamin, he is a serial killer they must stop before he can kill again. “A chilling suspense novel with gripping characters and a plot that reaches into the depths of good and evil. Some of Jim Laughter’s best writing.” Charles W. Sasser, author of THE DETACHMENT DELTA and OSS COMMANDO series. “Laughter weaves a unique blend of plot and characters that will keep you reading to the end…believer or not.” Nancy Robinson Masters, MasAir Publications, Inc. “In The Apostle Murders, Jim Laughter penned a chilling account of an eccentric, misguided sociopath on an unholy mission.” Bob Avey, author of Beneath a Buried House

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Comments

M. Chiappetta "MC" says:

A clever premise, not always perfect in execution If you like murder mysteries, CSI shows, or serial killer fiction…and if you don’t mind that with a dash of Christianity…this may be a book for you to consider buying. I thought the premise was great: a serial killer is reenacting the deaths of the 12 apostles. And let’s face it, those deaths were gruesome, so the serial killer’s reenactments are equally gruesome. I liked the characters for the most part, though there were a few places where their behavior seems cliched. The action moves along at a good pace, though the writing itself could use a little more polishing. At least one character pulls in Bible references, which fits the fact that these are, after all, apostle-style murders. It’s not overdone, I think it’s done tastefully, but it’s worth noting because that may matter to other readers. My biggest frustrations were that the killer’s motivation seemed hard to grasp, and that the ending seemed rushed and not as believable as I think it could have been.

M. Clark says:

the apostle murders The story was ok, but the use of either incorrect words and poor spelling was distracting. A decent editor/proofreader is needed. I hope the author did not think illuded was the same as eluded and that conscious is the correct spelling of conscience.

Dana says:

BIBLICAL LESSONS BEYOND REDEMPTION If Catechism lessons had been this horrendous to crawl through, I never would have survived catholic school.Old Revivalist minister decides to kill off people with the names of the Apostles, as well as their occupations: fishing, accounting, etc. (Which doesn’t explain why the hippy got killed, but that’s being picky.)Enter FBI agents out the wazoo, including the proverbial old codger smart-ass and his female partner. The newest rookie (from the fraudulent check department) overhears their conversation and is immediately advanced to top drawer, because he can solve the case with his knowledge of the bible.Jim Laughter certainly has no idea how rigid the rules of advancement are within the Federal Bureau of Investigations. (but that’s being picky)It is amazing how quickly one can read this book by flipping past chapters of intense biblical study and explanations as if all of us are from outer space and never heard of the bible.If you narrow it down to the few paragraphs that can hold your attention span, it could be a pamphlet. Not an interesting pamphlet, but definitely not a book.


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