Your favorite nameless protagonist returns in the final installment of this gripping flash fiction trilogy. Prepare to be stunned, dumbfounded and bewildered in the shocking conclusion of the Lobotomy series. All of your questions will finally be answered, well, all except one…
If you have not yet read Lobotomy or The Reason it is recommendable that you do because only then will you understand. Only then will you desperately crave this book.
Because The Murder is longer than your ordinary flash fiction story (about 2,000 words of actual story), it has been divided into two parts, two blood-chilling parts. And the ending will stop you dead in your tracks…
You have seen the aftermath. You have met the victim, befriended the murderer and you have discovered the motive. Now all you have to see is the murder. Pretty straightforward, right? Oh, if only it was that simple…
John Hansen is the teenage author of the THE PERFECT GAME series. His work appears in the lit mags “Raphael’s Village” and “Crack The Spine“ and in the “Dark Light” anthology published by CH&BB Publishing.
John is an avid reader, writer and book blogger among other things. He has a very interesting, unpredictable (sometimes good, sometimes bad), creative, disturbing, random, insightful and humorous mind. You can find him at home, cursing at whatever trivial concern dares vex him, mainly writers’ block. Or sometimes you can find him on his couch, after giving up on his writing, staring at the blank TV screen as if it is some magical, awe-inspiring promiseland. But in most cases, it isn’t.
This is the 3rd flash fiction story in the trilogy,"The Murder".You have seen the aftermath. You have met the victim, befriended the murderer and you have discovered the motive. Now all you have to see is the murder.This final sequence in the trilogy, clears up most of the questions that were floating in our brain when we read the previous books in the series.The author allows us to build slowly to the final climax.And the realization of the truth acted as a lobotomy.I really enjoyed the sequence, and this book was a real cliff hanger.
Somehow, I missed that this was the third story in a trilogy, so I didn't really understand it. I didn't know why it didn't make a lot of sense to me until I came to write the review and learned it was the conclusion of a series.