A cabin on Lake Michigan. A train in the Arizona desert. A cathedral in New Orleans. A farm in the woods of Canada.
DIVISIBLE BY SIX
James Masterson's world is falling apart. His girlfriend kidnapped. His uncle missing. His brothers, like him, running for their lives and scattered across the country. At the center of it all, a madman pulling the strings of a plot that will change the global political landscape. Lured into his trap, James must put his life on the line for those he cares for most in order to save the only family he has left.
DIVISIBLE BY SIX is the second book in The Trilogy of the Six series. It is the sequel to MULTIPLES OF SIX.
Raised in the wilds of northwestern NJ, Andy Rane admittedly led a bit of a sheltered life. Books and a vivid imagination were a large part of his childhood. After an ill-fated and thankfully brief college career as a Chemistry student, he discovered a love of writing. He studied Literature and Creative Writing at The Richard Stockton College of NJ, where he first got the idea for Multiples of Six.
He now lives in the not-so-wilds of NJ, with his wife, son, two cats, two chinchillas, a salamander named Fred, and an ever-changing number of fish that may...just may...have cannibalistic tendencies. He looks forward to telling stories that people like to read.
This is book 2 in the series Mutiples of Six. After book 1, I was hoping to find answers to the questions I was left with. But, I only found more questions and a lot of confusion. There is a rumor of book 3, but nothing yet. Even if it does come out, I doubt I will read it.
I was a lucky winner of this book here on goodreads.com. The book was well written, bu I was a bit lost early in the book since this is book #2 of a trilogy. I will have to go back & read book #1 (Multiples of Six) & be on the lookout for book #3 sometime in the future.
just could not put this down. Can't wait for the third piece of this wonderful trilogy. Thought-provoking theme and interesting characters. Hard to know who are the real villains in some instances. Definitely a worthy read.