Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Tenzing Norbu Mystery #1

The First Rule of Ten

Rate this book
Tenzing Norbu has work troubles. 'Ten' has already swapped life as a Buddhist monk for a career in the LAPD; now he's becoming a private eye. His last day as an LA cop could have gone more smoothly: a simple domestic dispute ends with two bodies, three victims and an unceremonious exit.

But he's in for a rude awakening if he thinks life as a PI is going to be less complicated. His first case is a tangle of strange cults, Hollywood double-dealing and suspicious deaths. Even with his years of spiritual training, Ten has a hard time balancing deadly suspects, a wayward pet cat, a fiery ex-partner and the start of a new romance...

The First Rule of Ten is the action-packed start of the unforgettable Tenzing Norbu series.

320 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2012

261 people are currently reading
1535 people want to read

About the author

Gay Hendricks

110 books500 followers
Dr. Gay Hendricks has served for more than 30 years as one of the major contributors to the fields of relationship transformation and body-mind therapies. Along with his wife, Dr. Kathlyn Hendricks, Gay is the author of many bestsellers, including Conscious Loving, At the Speed of Life, and Five Wishes.

Gay received his PhD in counseling psychology from Stanford University in 1974. After a 21-year career as a professor at the University of Colorado, he founded The Hendricks Institute, which offers seminars in North America, Asia, and Europe. He is also the founder of a new virtual learning center for transformation, Gaia Illumination University.

Throughout his career, Gay has done executive coaching with more than 800 executives, including the top management at such firms as Dell Computer, Hewlett Packard, Motorola, and KLM. His book, The Corporate Mystic, is used widely to train management in combining business skills and personal development tools.

In recent years he has also been active in creating new forms of conscious entertainment. In 2003, along with movie producer Stephen Simon, Gay founded the Spiritual Cinema Circle, which distributes inspirational movies to subscribers in more than 70 countries around the world. He was the executive producer of the feature film Conversations with God, and he has appeared on more than 500 radio and television shows, including Oprah, CNN, CNBC, 48 Hours, and others

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
643 (29%)
4 stars
915 (42%)
3 stars
496 (22%)
2 stars
92 (4%)
1 star
27 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 282 reviews
Profile Image for Frances.
192 reviews360 followers
February 18, 2015
Enjoyable and A Fun Read!
The synopsis of this book immediately caught my eye. Ten, short for Tenzing, is a Tibetan monk who after years of chanting longed for a different way of life. As the Buddha says, change is inevitable and that was something Ten desperately wanted; he wanted to be a detective. Ten finally leaves the monastery, travels to Los Angeles, joins the LAPD and eventually becomes a private detective. This novel was a fun, enjoyable, easy read, with many thought-provoking life lessons throughout.
Profile Image for Benjamin Thomas.
2,002 reviews371 followers
March 5, 2012
I'm often skeptical when I try a new mystery; I tend to expect some kind of formula writing, or a re-hash of stuff I've read before. So it takes an intriguing premise or character for me to give them a try. Ten Norbu, the protagonist of this novel, is a former Tibetan monk, turned LA cop, and now will attempt to make a go of it as a private detective. OK, that's certainly intriguing enough to get me to give it a whirl. But how would it measure up to my expectations?

Folks, I can honestly say, this novel is the best debut mystery novel I've read in years. It not only lived up to my hopes but far surpassed them. Turns out our hero, Ten (short for Tenzing, by the way) used to read contraband Sherlock Holmes stories as a child while growing up in the monastery. How cool is that? This novel does everything right: masterful plot, great character building, nice settings, fabulous pacing (so important in a mystery/detective novel), and all done in an intimate way that makes you one with the story (no pun intended). I was really able to identify with the character of Ten, himself, and just loved his outlook on life and the way he copes with stressful situations.

All that is great as long as the mystery itself, the plot, is good. It's like trying a new restaurant with a new gimmick. The gimmick might get you to try it but to keep coming back the food has to be really good. And, the food here is spot on. I understand this is the first of three planned novels. Rest assured the story is complete in this one novel (no cliffhangers or anything), but is open enough for more. I, for one, hope there are more than two still to come. Really a fantastic read.
Profile Image for Ije the Devourer of Books.
1,951 reviews58 followers
November 5, 2014
Excellent!

The first rule of Ije is to read as many great murder mysteries as possible.

The second rule of Ije is that the mystery must keep me guessing, no easy solutions please.

And this book delivered and I am thrilled to have another mystery series to work through. (Yay)

But who is Ten?

Tenzing Norbu was brought up by his alcoholic mother in Paris and Buddhist monk father in Tibet. As a child when his mother died he moved from France to Tibet to become a monk at the same monastery that his father led. In the end it didn't work out but those deep teachings and meditations that the child struggled with became very much part of the man.

Years later Tenzing (Ten) having worked for LAPD for many years decides to go it alone as a private investigator. When a friend of an old friend is killed Ten decides to investigate her death and uncovers a web of fraud, murder, mafia, cults and pig farming.

Ten himself is a mystic and a mystery. The Buddhist teaching that shaped his youth provides him with extra awareness and a mystic sensitivity to the world around him. This mysticism enables him to see beyond the facts that emerge as he investigates.

The mystery is one which I enjoyed because it kept me guessing but Ten also kept me guessing as I got to know him during the story. Ten is a complex man. Not only does he solve murders but he is trying to solve the mystery of his own life. Having had one catastrophic relationship he is unwilling to enter another until he meets Julie another friend of a friend. Julie is different to his former relationship but Ten needs to discover what he wants from her and who she is, as well as who he is with her.

This is a great story for the beginning of a series. Ten is an amazing character - a third culture kid with a peculiar upbringing and heritage which have made him an enigmatic man, and yet it is the enigma of who he is that makes him such an extraordinary investigator. As he pieces together the mystery he shows a deep regard for his inner life, dreams, reflections and what these show him about the case. He makes friends, learns about himself and learns what it means to trust and love. His early relationship with Julie is fascinating as we get to see his thoughts about her mixed with both his desire for her and his reluctance to get involved with someone.

The mystery develops at an even pace and draws the reader in and holds their attention as things get more complex with different players, intrigue and a network of murder.

I love a good mystery and this is definitely one of them. The tentative romance gives the story an additional and enjoyable dimension.

Well worth reading and I am looking forward to following this series. Big smiles and happiness for me as I add a few more to my tbr pile.
Profile Image for Susan (aka Just My Op).
1,126 reviews58 followers
December 4, 2013
4.5 out of 5 stars. This is my new favorite series in the mystery genre. I love the character Tenzing Norbu. The writing is smart and fun, and the mystery doesn't involve overly gruesome murders and doesn't need to. Ten, a former Buddhist monk, teaches as well as learns as he begins his life as a private investigator, and some lessons are harder than others.

I initially wondered if I had missed a first book in the series because there were references to his life as an LAPD officer in the days before the story picks up. But no, this is the first of the series. Perhaps I'll learn more of his earlier life in subsequent books in the series. The next is due to be published in October 2012, I believe.

I read this book for fun, and I got that. But I also received some nice reminders about mindfulness and spirituality without feeling I was being preached to. I loved that Ten has a foot in the Buddhist spiritual world and another foot in the Mustang-loving, relationship-bashing world. An altogether enjoyable mystery.

I received a complimentary copy from the publisher for review.
426 reviews
November 22, 2013
I’m surprised that this book has so many four and five star ratings. I’d give it two and a half. It’s readable and interesting enough to get you to the end but it certainly doesn’t belong in the first rank of crime fiction. Several Goodreaders suggest that it doesn’t follow a formula. But it has all the formulaic elements of detective fiction: an interesting, but flawed detective, good atmospherics, a dead body to start the action, then the pealing of the onion of information that leads the detective and reader to the solution of the crime. A romantic interlude is optional. (The romantic event in this book just doesn’t ring true to me. But it does give the authors a chance to write about food).

In this book the plot is okay and the atmospherics (LA) are average.
The flawed detective has lots of potential (half-Tibetan, former Buddhist monk who becomes LAPD detective, then quits at the beginning of the book). I’m always wary of fiction with co-authors. Am dubious about collaborating like they do in the movies and TV. The result is an unclear voice and the impression of a story written by committee. In the case of The First Rule of Ten the voice sounds a bit female to me. And, the Buddhist stuff is inconsistent.

Our hero, Tenzing Norbu, may have one of the best names in detective fiction but strikes me as self-indulgent for even a backsliding Buddhist. For example, he owns a house up in Topanga Canyon, drives a restored and bright yellow ’65 Shelby Mustang and, most confusing to me, owns a .38 cal. Wilson Combat Supergrade, a weapon that retails for just under $4,000. Now this is a handgun that any dedicated gun nut might want to own but one would have to take a really big gulp to put four grand down on a handgun when you could buy six or seven really fine weapons for the same amount.

Yet, as our story opens he doesn’t have a pot to piss in. How did he manage to accumulate all this stuff and how does that jibe with his Buddhist practice?

Here’s another problem with the book: he has a Watson named Mike who is, of course, a computer hacker par excellence. This is getting to be overdone and will never be done better than Steig Larsson did it in The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo. It just makes things too easy when all you have to do is call Mike and say, “Find out everything about X.”

It appears that the authors have gone on to write books two and three and a prequel. More power to them. I’m all for writers making money any way that works. But, they will have to go on without me.
Profile Image for Linden.
2,084 reviews1 follower
October 29, 2022
Tenzing Norbu, AKA Ten, is Buddhist monk turned LAPD cop turned private detective. When Barbara stops by his home looking for her ex, who used to live there, he is surprised, even more so when she turns up dead. He knows then that he has his first case. Barbara had recently left a cult, and there are some questionable people running it, possibly an ex-con masquerading as a man of God. Add in some insurance policies with the same beneficiaries, and Ten knows something is terribly wrong. I really liked the characters and the unique premise of this mystery, and was pleased to earn that this is the first in a series of five novels.
Profile Image for Jan.
6,531 reviews99 followers
July 25, 2023
Tenzing Norbu has been a Tibetan monk and an LAPD detective but is now a detective in the private sector considering becoming a licensed PI. He is still fast friends with his LAPD partner/wife/baby twins, but few others. Then a former songstress shows at is door by mistake but is murdered shortly after. Thus, he starts on an investigation with his nerd friend (computer whiz) and finds a whole lot of trouble and dishonesty as well as a new friend (septuagenarian).
The characters are all realistic and engaging, the investigation riveting, the world building very effective, and the plot twists somewhat aggravating. In other words, I loved it.
Jeremy Arthur is an amazing voice actor who really rocks this role as narrator!
Profile Image for Dika.
125 reviews25 followers
October 22, 2021
Story: 4.1/5.0
Character: 4.5/5.0
Vibe (idk why but I just want to bring this up): 4.8/5.0
Profile Image for Carolyn Breckinridge.
Author 3 books46 followers
July 4, 2021
How thrilling to find a new series and new authors with whom I want to spend a lot of time. Such is the case with co-authors Gay Hendricks and Tinker Lindsay, who have written a series of novels based on a Tibetan monk turned police detective turned private investigator. The private investigator’s name is Tenzing Norbu, known more casually as Ten. Ten grew up In a monastery in India, splitting his time between this environment where he lived and trained as a monk under his father’s unaffectionate eye, and his free-spirited but substance-abusing American mother’s home in Paris. Ten, a rebellious monk in training, winds up in California and ultimately follows his childhood passion, to follow in the footsteps of Sherlock Holmes. The first rule of Ten, which states, “Don’t ignore intuitive tickles lest they reappear as sledgehammers,” helps to drive Ten’s Buddhist-grounded approach to crime fighting. The overarching philosophy of Buddhism is peppered beautifully throughout this book, as is delightfully-placed wit. Ten also drives a vintage bright yellow mustang, has a love for fine dining, has romantic inclinations, and a Persian cat named Tank. Through meditation, dangerous sleuthing, struggling cyber-sleuthing, and collecting both friends and criminals along the way, Ten is a private investigator in Los Angeles prepared to match his skills against both the super-rich and ex-con ‘bad-guys,’ a religious cult with nefarious intentions, and multiple deaths that don’t quite add up to natural. Fast-paced and fun, with Buddhist influence and plenty of humor, ‘The First Rule’ of Ten is a total delight.
Profile Image for Cheryl.
6,511 reviews237 followers
February 24, 2013
Tenzing “Ten” Norbu is a Buddhist and newly appointed private investigator. This first client is a woman named Barbara Maxey. She asks ten to give her ex, Zimmy Backus a warning. That he might be in trouble. Ten does not really take Barbara too seriously. That is until she turns up in the morgue dead as a doornail.

I liked the idea of the character Ten. I like that he was a Buddhist private investigator. I have not come across a character like this before. So my interest was piqued. Unfortunately for me this book missed the mark. I found that Ten’s downfall was his Buddhist background. He never let himself react to anything too seriously. Like for example when he broke his first rule and it was early in the book that he broke it, he just commented that he broke his first rule. Never overreacted. Also, I thought that monks were taught discipline so that they had more patience and could hold out longer. So why did Ten break his first rule so quickly? Of course, I am no expert on this subject matter.

So what Ten’s reactions to everything, this book seemed mild. Even though the rest of the characters used some cuss words and the action was a good murder set up. Also, I felt that the story moved slowly. The action was not the type to be in your face. I had to skim lots of parts as if to press fast forward. The ending was nice and tidy. There were no loose ends left. The pairing of Mr. Hendricks and Ms. Lindsay was a good one. I could not tell where one stopped and the other one picked up.
Profile Image for Diane S ☔.
4,901 reviews14.6k followers
January 31, 2012
3.5 Hard to come up with a unique concept for a private detective but these authors have managed to do just that. Ten has been raised in a monastery and was a Buddhist monk, which gives this mystery a different spin. Meditation, an organic diet, in touch view of nature and quite a bit of humor is interspersed with the solving of the mystery. Loved reading his philosophies and his supporting characters are enjoyable as is the storyline. A new character to savor and enjoy. ARC by NetGalley.
264 reviews3 followers
September 28, 2021
Disclaimer here: I have practiced Tibetan Buddhism. for 30 years From a Buddhist point of view, the story is interesting, and accurate, well, except for saying sweet tea is Tibetan tea. Sweet tea is made in India. Tibetan tea is made with butter and salt.

The book is well written and the plot is interesting. The one criticism I have concerning the plot is that pitting a Tibetan against a nominally Christian group is not politically a good idea these days. Yes, the cult wasn't really Christian, but they claimed to be and that is enough to flag the plot line as a sensitive subject. Which may well explain why the manuscript wasn't picked up by a major publishing house. (The copy I have was published by Hay House.)
Author 1 book29 followers
July 4, 2021
3.5 almost 4

In many ways, this book reminded me of the Ty Buchanan series but James Scott Bell but from a Buddhist bent but for a few exceptions.

The language is not as clean - There are quite a few F-bombs in a few places. I know to most it is not an issue. Language is not my first language and I learn it when it seemed to be far more civil and far less coarse if not vulgar. Now, it seems that vulgarity is used as punctuation and it saddens me. Also, I find it unnecessary to a good read. I know some will mock me for that...so be it.

Sex - There is implied sex but that is it.
Although, I must admit I had a hard time reconciling someone who is spiritual (of the Buddhist persuasion) with casual sex on a second date...call me a fuddy-duddy.

Violence - mild and nothing gory.




Profile Image for Chris.
580 reviews45 followers
August 30, 2021
The premise of this book is interesting and I wanted to like it more than I did. The authors are very qualified to write about a Buddhist monk who becomes a police officer and now a private investigator. The meditative details are in detail and all through the book. It is unique and I would suggest it if you meditation and murder sound interesting to you. It didn't hold my interest and I am not planning to read more of the series. Still a really unique book.
Profile Image for Jackie.
512 reviews7 followers
November 6, 2018
Fun Buddhist character, with a splash of plots
Profile Image for Riobhcah.
315 reviews
August 20, 2019
I enjoyed this book tremendously. Being a Tibetan Buddhist myself, I thought it was fascinating how the paradoxes of Samasara were subtly expressed in the storyline. Ten himself is a very interesting character, having to live with so many, as do we all since we are all creatures of paradox. I’m looking forward to reading the following books in this series very much.
Profile Image for Penny.
1,242 reviews
October 8, 2022
Too sexist for me ... first person doesn't work if the character is not especially likeable (as well as the narrator).
125 reviews1 follower
May 31, 2024
I really liked this character. I enjoyed this book.
Profile Image for Anita.
654 reviews16 followers
July 5, 2020
Great main character and exciting story. This is a character I want to follow in the series.
Profile Image for Delia.
47 reviews18 followers
May 16, 2012
Tenzin Norbu is truly a one-off: an ex-Buddhist monk and ex-homicide detective who applies the principles of Mindfulness to the job of solving of murder mysteries. What sets this character apart from any other contenders in the detective fiction market is his adherence to the Buddhist practice of 'checking in' with his visceral and emotional states in each situation that requires a considered response from him. With a taste for good wine, an occasional cold beer, and an eclectic approach to food, he is certainly not your average Buddhist. In fact, he hated life in the monastery whilst still seeing the benefits of his training there.His family was also anything but ordinary. He had an eccentric Franco-American mother and a rather severe Buddhist monk for a father. Throw in part of his childhood in France and then immersion in colloquial American culture and you have a uniquely appealing and intriguing character who is just exotic enough to baffle the brash and often insensitive cops he spent 20 years working with.

The First Rule of Ten opens on Ten's last day with the LAPD. After making a brief appearance he gives his own farewell party a miss and embarks on semi-retirement as a private investigator. Ten's innate decency and insistence on dealing with 'What Is' rather than focusing on what distracts most people, wins him roughly equal numbers of detractors and friends. His first case involving a strange and mysterious cult with disappearing members, conflicting loyalties in the local sheriff's department, deceit and betrayal of a son trying to manipulate his father for gain and a political/financial back story and you have the makings of an absorbing and highly enjoyable read. I like Ten as a character and can already see the options for a tv series and/or movies landing on the desks of the writer, Gay Hendricks (better known to most people as relationship psychologist) and screen writer Tinker Lindsay. The authors envisage a set of 10 novels in the Tenzin Norbu series and I for one am delighted at the prospect of nine more novels to come. They have started what I hope will be a new trend: selling the book on Kindle for $2.99 in order to reach the largest possible readership. I think it's a brilliant marketing strategy. Come book number two, the audience will already be panting for more. Hendricks' command of interpersonal dynamics and Lindsay's long experience as a Buddhist meditator have combined to produce to new genre, the Mindful P.I. Long may he prosper!
Profile Image for LJ.
3,159 reviews305 followers
April 6, 2017
First Sentence: I was just sitting down to a cold beer and hot corn soup, at the end of a long week, when my phone rang.

Half Tibetan, half Caucasian, raised in the Buddhist monastery, Tenzing “Ten” Nurbu always wanted to be Sherlock Holmes. Now retired from the LAPD, he becomes a private investigator with a high-tech sidekick, and his first case.

It’s always intriguing to have a protagonist with an unusual background and Ten is definitely different. A very good opening introduces us to the character, his background, outlook and ambition all within a dangerous situation and very effectively sets him, and us, up for the next step. Then, for some unexplainable reason, Hendricks falls into the rookie-author trap of not one, but two portents. Happily, he stopped that completely unnecessary device after those two.

The mix of Buddhism, with descriptions and explanations of the rituals such as a bardo, is nice, but more research for accuracy would have been appreciated. Still, it’s a nice offset to Ten’s passion for his car and guns. His alleged telepathic powers with his cat is a bit over the top. I would suggest not reading this while hungry—“Thirty minutes later, we were serving up a cashew-and-vegetable stir-fry with basmati rice. Expertly chopped cucumber salad on the side.”

There is an interesting mix of philosophy and menace in a verbal dual--“The Buddha himself said we shouldn’t believe his words without question—we must discover the truth for ourselves.” Brother Eldon saw things a little differently. “Obey your God, Nehemiah. Obey me. Go! Guard God’s Paradise!” I got a sudden urge to “find my own way” out of there, and quick.”—and a simplistic, but adequate definition of karma—“…it is our intention that determines our karma; good intentions produce good karma; bad intentions produce bad karma.”

The story is well-plotted, and a bit painful for those of us who all too well remember Jim Jones and the Peoples Temple, but with a very interesting and effective twist. There are a few minor inaccuracies related to Buddhism, and rather TSTL move by the protagonist.

“The First Rule of Ten” has plenty of action and a good resolution, as well as some minor first-book problems. Still, it makes for a good airplane read.

THE FIRST RULE OF TEN (PI-Tenzing Norbu-LA-Contemp) - Good
Hendricks, Gay and Tinker Lindsay – 1st in series
Hay House Visions – January, 2012
Profile Image for Amy Corwin.
Author 59 books133 followers
March 26, 2012
"The First Rule of Ten" is a fascinating mystery featuring an ex-Buddhist monk who became a police officer and has now quit to become a private investigator. As you might expect, the books has a definite zen-like quality to it. :) Tenzing Norbu, nicknamed Ten, is an interesting character, but I felt a little lukewarm about him. I liked him and his interaction with John D, an old farmer with cancer, but Ten came off as a bit of a jerk at times, particularly where women were concerned, hence my overall lukewarm reaction to him. I just didn't find him as endearing as I usually find characters with flaws. I'd like him to have more real flaws without being such a goody-two-shoes jerk. I know that makes no sense and even seems contradictory, but what c
an I say? I guess I prefer grumpy, bad-tempered jerks. LOL

That will give you a bad impression though. Ten is an interesting character and like I said, his relationship with John D. makes the book. It makes Ten a lot more real and likeable.

The mystery starts when a beautiful woman shows up, asking for his help, and he turns her away. She winds up dead and Ten decides to investigate her death. It leads him to some strange encounters and troubling events. The story moves quickly and is well written, which I really appreciated. It was the kind of story I enjoy since I learned a few new things about criminal activities that I would never have imagined. The ending wasn't a complete surprise, but the story moved well and kept you fully engaged.

The real test of any book is whether you'll buy another in the series, and the answer is yes for this one. Try it. You'll like it.
395 reviews7 followers
December 11, 2011
Tenzing Norbu is a complicated man. The product of a flighty, self-absorbed mother and a Tibetan father, he was raised in a monastery in Tibet, eventually moving to the West, leaving monastic life behind, and becoming a police officer.

After a near-miss during a call, he decides to leave the force and become a private investigator. His first case isn't so much acquired as it is dropped on his head, in the person of an escapee from a religious cult, trying to warn Ten's landlord of a shadowy threat. When she turns up dead, he takes the case. Cults, organized crime, and existential worries make this a fun read.

It's an engaging mystery, well-written, with fully-realized characters and a strong plot. Norbu's personal life doesn't overshadow the storyline, and the action sequences are in service to the plot. I'll be eagerly awaiting the second one.
Profile Image for Grady.
712 reviews50 followers
November 7, 2013
The concept -- a Tibetan Buddhist ex-cop striking out as a private eye in Los Angeles -- is interesting, if rife with potential for cultural appropriation. The plot is fine, mixing a mobbed-up hog farm with an odd cult and insurance fraud and murder; and there's the obligatory romantic interest. But somehow, this just didn't work for me. I think the authors perceive human nature on a different set of wavelengths than I do, and throughout the book, I felt like I was trying to absorb the story through a distracting New Age gauze. Adding to the challenge, while the lead character and narrator is a supposed to be a guy, the narrative voice didn't sound like a guy. It was enjoyable enough, but the rest of the series does not beckon.
Profile Image for Greg.
Author 3 books46 followers
October 18, 2019
I really enjoyed this book, even though the mystery felt a little loosey-goosey, and there was no way I believed the main character was a former LAPD homicide detective. What I enjoyed and admired was the way the authors portrayed the practice of mindfulness, not just day to day but also in times of great stress. For me, this elevated the book above other mysteries that seek deep truth from the external world, but not from the far more interesting internal one. Four enthusiastic stars!
96 reviews2 followers
April 19, 2012
i think this is my first grown up detective book since i read Encyclopedia Brown in the second grade! I really enjoyed this book. I liked the juxtaposition of Tibetan monk and private detective in the main character. Just the right amount of humor too...hope there are more books to come!
Profile Image for Tanya.
336 reviews3 followers
August 19, 2016
This book seems to have been written for me! A great mystery, set in Southern California, and the detective is in touch with intuition, meditation, visualization, and good food! (And he has a cat!) the discussions of karma and compassion added depth to the story.
Profile Image for Lorna Nicholson.
Author 69 books79 followers
April 14, 2019
Fun, fun read. I'm a mystery buff and this book was totally refreshing.
Profile Image for Dawn.
22 reviews1 follower
June 5, 2012
I think I'm going to really enjoy this series!
Profile Image for Ellen Chronister.
97 reviews
August 22, 2013
good read. thanks Babs for the referral. I will continue to read the next one in the series.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 282 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.