Special edition contains first two thrillers in the Mark Taylor Series: NO GOOD DEED and MARCH INTO HELL
No Good Deed: Book One Mark Taylor knows his actions scream guilty--but he was only trying to stop the horrible terrorist attack. Instead, the government labels him an enemy combatant and throws him in the brig with no rights, no trial, and no way to prove his innocence.
Mark's just a regular guy--a photographer--who finds himself in an extraordinary situation when an antique camera he buys at a dusty Afghanistan bazaar produces photographs of future tragedies. When he discovers that he can prevent the events in the photos from occurring, he can't live with the guilt if he doesn't try to stop the tragedies.
When he sees September 11th, his efforts fail when no one listens to his frantic warnings. Then he learns that being an 'enemy combatant' means the government can do anything they want to him. Anything at all.
March Into Hell: Book Two Mark Taylor's life takes a dark turn when his heroism becomes the subject of a newspaper article. The media attention and a harrowing encounter with the occult while saving a young woman, puts him in the sights of the cult's ruthless leader who covets the secret to Mark's power.
Uncomfortable in the public spotlight, Mark suspects he's being tested by the force behind the camera's prophetic magic. Battling his own self-doubt, he must maintain the secret or risk certain death.
M.P. McDonald makes a living from taking your breath away... then giving it back via a tube or two. She lives in a frozen land full of ice, snow, and abominable snowmen. On the days that she's not taking her car ice-skating, she sits huddled over a chilly computer, tapping out the story of a camera that can see the future. She hopes it can see summer approaching, too.
Psychological Thriller is just too tame of description for these two books. I had previously read the first book and realized this shortly after starting it for the 2nd time. A good book can be read more than once, and being able to go right into the second book was an added bonus. This author's tale about a normal man is intriguing and at times inspiring. Well rounded characters with excellent descriptions, filled with non stop action and a few twists I didn't see coming. Well worth the time to read with awesome plots.
I was excited about reading a follow-up to "No Good Deeds" because I enjoyed it so much. "March Into Hell" was well-written but a bit of a let-down; however, I still rated it 4.4 stars.