Am I right? You're smarter than most, embrace old fashioned morals, love your country, dogs, and guns... and dig ruthless fiction...
Hi! I'm Clayton Lindemuth, and my novels embrace rural noir truth. Mind your own business, be slow to anger. But don't ever back down to evil. Justice happens when the wicked die.
If we're tracking so far, I wrote My Brother's Destroyer, and all the rest, just for you.
You'll stay awake too late, underline fun new ways to cuss, muse about new philosophies and read random passages to strangers to make the world a better place.
Literary depth. Thriller pace. If you've got the stomach to watch evil men die, dress for the woods and grab a lamp. We've work to do.
Read all the other books and waited for this one only to be disappointed. Very muddled and confusing . Just seemed to be a load of mumbo jumbo with no real story line .
Baer at his finest! Another gem from the mind of Clayton Lindemuth. If you have not read the other books in this series, you will be lost trying to read Destroyer as a stand-alone novel. The preceding books let you begin to understand the mind of Baer, Tat, and even Stinky Joe. The separate series about Angus Hargrave will help the reader better understand all the commotion around that farmhouse. All of the books by this author force the reader to do some genuine soul searching and define, or perhaps redefine, justice. I find all of his writing very entertaining. I hope there is more Baer Creighton in the future or another spin-off series like Shirley F'n Lyle. Some stories about Tat perhaps? Unfortunately, all Clayton Lindemuth books are no longer available on Amazon Unlimited. Sad indeed.
Clayton Lindemuth writes great stories. His main character, Baer Creighton, is an interesting individual. A good man who seems to be destined to catch evil from all angles. I’ve read all the books and each one gets better. I do like the fact Baer and Joe, the dog, have an interesting means of communication. Wish my dogs would speak to me so clearly. But I digress… I recommend this book, as well as the Baer Creighton series, if you want to relax and, for a change, see evil get its comeuppance. Thank you Clayton for some great reading. Keep it up, my friend…
I do not have the talent for words to express my experience while reading this book! So much soul searching and truth in a phrase -----hits your mind and heart like a smack on the back our head!!!!! Wondering how this author gained this deep insight of our humanity and our divinity!
I'm reading a great book already,but since I found Baer 7 books ago he demands my attention. I really hope Clayton long life and prosperity. And as much shine as he can handle....
I'm waiting for the actual book. Don't want to read sitting at a computer or squinting at a smart phone. I want pages I can dogear. Books are my friends and I surround myself with them. They keep me company in my dotterage. Also, books 1-6 are waiting.
If you do not start with book one you will be more than lost. Nice finish to the series although a little different than the previous six. Not my favorite, but great detail in writing, and funny as all get out. Testicular humor. Read it, you'll see!!
Death seems to follow Baer wherever he goes. The devil is in all of us but so is the Lord. We have to decide which we follow. Baer thinks he follows the Lord. I hope so. You decide. Read!!!
This is a novel about redemption. It's long on stream of thought, profanity and sex, but it makes some valid and valuable points about humanity and what it is to be human. And the character development is golden.
Baer is a legend of epic proportions. Taking on evil like it's his mission in life. Between the electrical charges and this latest visions, he slays evil like an avenging angel.
One of my favorite authors but not one of my favorite books. Lindemuth's mastery of capturing the nuance of action with telegraphic text remains a great strength and was display in several passages. However, this style did not work nearly as well for me when he was addressing the existential spiritual and philosophical issues which seemed to have infected this narrative. Unlike his books where the action dominates, I found this story hard to following and myself caring less and less about the less than compelling conclusion.