No Man’s Sons is a thrilling blend of prehistoric biology, modern science, and futuristic concepts. Set in the stark, Arctic expanse of the Siberian tundra.
When New York reporter Corky Mason returns to her Siberian roots to investigate a story about cloned mammoths, she uncovers a government memo suggesting she’s the sister of four genetically engineered Cro-Magnon brothers. Brothers who kill people who threaten their freedom.
Renegade agents of the FSB arrest Corky and the brothers, imprisoning them in cages. In a race against time to fulfill her mission, Corky must fight to prove her identity and regain her freedom.
Mainstream author Roger Pepper left a successful career in science to pursue his lifelong ambition to become a novelist. An Associate of the British Institution of Metallurgists, Roger attended postgraduate studies at the University of Manchester in the United Kingdom, where he earned a Ph.D. Roger is the coauthor of a patent on the development of the metal composite material used for the antenna of the Hubble Space Telescope. He began writing in his spare time while serving as the Director of Research of an Aerospace Materials Company in the United States. His memoir, My Father the Viking, won 3rd Prize in the 2006 Linda Joy Myers Memoir Competition of the National League of American Pen Women, an open competition for published and unpublished works. He received an Honorable Mention for an earlier version of the first 50 pages of The Brothers Cro-Magnon from a contest run by the Speculative Literature Foundation. He is the author of four novels: No Man’s Sons, Tommy’s War, Ice, and Davide. Roger is a member of the Maine Writers and Publishers Alliance. He is a co-organizer of the Portland Writers Group (480 members) and spent several years as the host of some of their monthly writing workshops. Tess Gerritsen acknowledged him in her bestselling medical thriller, Harvest, for providing research materials. With friends from the Appalachian Mountain Club, Roger hiked in the Austrian and Italian Alps, traveled in France and Israel, and trekked in the Kangchenjunga and Annapurna Himalayan regions of Nepal, the Tien Shan [mountains/Mountains] of the Central Asian republics of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Russia. He writes full-time and lives in Maine.