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DEATHLY DECISIONS

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With no known knowledge of the treacherous drug game, Blow and his cousin Peanut, is introduced to the raw life of heroin in the drug infested streets of uptown New Orleans.Upon the cousin's rise to Hoodstars, they form a criminal empire with a couple of childhood friends from the Melphomene housing projects and find themselves knee deep in women, money and the scary spotlights of the streets.But in any criminal enterprise where money and women are involved, jealousy betrayal and death seems to always destroy a weak man or woman's dream. In the case at hand, both Peanut and Blow will make DEATHLY Decisions that will have the average joe thinking twice about joining the cutthroat drug game as we know it...

329 pages, Kindle Edition

Published June 28, 2018

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About the author

Donald James

54 books17 followers
Donald James (born Donald James Wheal) was a British television writer, novelist and non-fiction writer.

Educated at Sloane Grammar School and Pembroke College, Cambridge (where he read history), James completed his National Service in the Parachute Regiment before returning to London to work as a supply teacher.

He was the author of the best-selling novels Vadim, Monstrum, The Fortune Teller and The Fall of the Russian Empire, as well as non-fiction books such as The Penguin Dictionary of the Third Reich. He wrote under a number of pseudonyms, notably Thomas Dresden and James Barwick (originally in collaboration with fellow writer Tony Barwick, another long-term contributor to the various television productions of Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and their company, AP Films/Century 21).

James's career as a scriptwriter included work on TV series such as The Adventurer, The Avengers, The Champions, Department S, Joe 90, Mission: Impossible, The Persuaders!, The Protectors, Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased), The Saint, The Secret Service, Space: 1999, Terrahawks and UFO. He wrote for a total of 22 titles, including the Century 21 film Doppelgänger, and acted in small three roles between 1961 and 1962.

After spending periods in France and Ireland, he returned to London. His autobiographical account of London life during World War II, World's End, was published in 2005. A second volume of memoirs, White City, was published in March 2007.

James died in London on 24 April 2008. Married three times and divorced once, he is survived by twin daughters

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