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STALEMATE

There can be no winners

But two other factions have different ideas. Bishop William Wyatt Walker, spellbinding African-American televangelist whose church takes in $500 million a year in contributions from the poorest of the poor, decides the church has lost touch with the common man and needs a new symbol of salvation – the Libertyville Cotton Works and the 40 acres that surround it. He’ll do whatever it takes to make sure the church gets the property.

Meanwhile, a brilliant, half-crazed Mexican-American lawyer and his militant contingent, faced with “the country’s growing paranoia toward Hispanic,” seeks to create his own Sanctuary Nation. His “army” takes armed control of the cotton works, holding hostages to ensure that the factory and its acreage are deeded to “the first truly Mexican town in the Southeastern U.S.”

The stage is set for a Stalemate of epic proportions, a war where there can be no winners. Like James Dickey’s Deliverance, this book is a mixture of a thriller tinged with adventure, camaraderie, dread, and the horror that only an unexpected, unspeakable situation can inflict. Human nature is human nature, and it is impossible to predict how anyone would act if confronted with a similar situation. Powerful and suspenseful, Stalemate explores the best – and the worst – in the human spirit as it thunders toward a spine-chilling climax.

This latest work is one you won’t be able to put down – and one you’ll long remember.



SKORZENY-AMAZON COMMENTS



These are genuine reviews from Amazon.com. Names and email addresses have been deleted to protect the privacy rights of those who were kind enough to write in, but feel free to visit Amazon.com to see the originals of these reviews.  Thank you. – Hugh

***** Fascinating Read!!! So intelligently well-written! The dialogue just drew me in and the author really has a way with painting the scene. Highly recommend! – October 2018

***** Plenty of plot twists and interesting characters! I enjoyed the diversity of the factions. The groups involved were not only segmented by race, but sliced again by religion, greed, compassion, good and evil. – November 2018