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Ed Ruggero's Blame the Dead is the thrilling start of an action-packed and timely World War II series by a former Army Officer for fans of compelling historical fiction.
Set against the heroism and heartbreak of World War II, former Army officer Ed Ruggero brilliantly captures, with grace and authenticity, the evocative and timeless stories of ordinary people swept up in extraordinary times.
Sicily, 1943. Eddie Harkins, former Philadelphia beat cop turned Military Police lieutenant, reluctantly finds himself first at the scene of a murder at the US Army’s 11th Field Hospital. There the nurses contend with heat, dirt, short-handed staffs, the threat of German counterattack, an ever-present flood of horribly wounded GIs, and the threat of assault by one of their own—at least until someone shoots Dr. Myers Stephenson in the head.
With help from nurse Kathleen Donnelly, once a childhood friend and now perhaps something more, it soon becomes clear to Harkins that the unit is rotten to its core. As the battle lines push forward, Harkins is running out of time to find one killer before he can strike again.
At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.
336 pages, Kindle Edition
First published March 3, 2020
Set during World War II, we follow Eddie Harkins, a former Philadelphia cop currently a Military Police lieutenant.![]()
"If you'd have asked me yesterday if he was capable of murder, I'd have said no...Today I'm not so sure."
"We've turned this place into a shithole..."He's stationed at the 11th Field Hospital in Sicily and when Dr Myers Stephenson ends up dead, he's the only one who's able to investigate.
"You got a stomach bug?" Drake asked.But with everyone seeming to team up against him, with the suspects multiplying by the hour, and his deadline to solve the murder coming every closer...this might just be the one case that gets away.
"No, I...I've never seen a murder victim before,"
"How could a broad get that angry over getting her ass pinched?"and this:
"Were you a virgin when you joined the army?"And this:
"Grab-ass was acceptable, though? Professionally, I mean."I feel like some authors really use rape as a pivotal plot point that really makes the audience feel it and its rippling effects (see Bear Town by Fredrik Backman - A single instance completely and utterly changed my outlook on the book).