Released Titles


Alone: Orphaned on the Ocean 
Terry Jo Duperrault was eleven years old when her family was murdered at sea aboard a rented sailboat while vacationing off the coast of Florida. She jumped overboard just in time to escape.

Surviving four days on a piece of cork float in the middle of the ocean, Terry Jo’s rescue pictures graced LIFE Magazine soon after her rescue. This is the first time Terry Jo, now known as Tere Duperrault Fassbender, has ever been able to fully tell her story. In September 1988 Oprah Winfrey reunited her with the freighter captain who saved her but, even then, she was not healed enough to reveal what it takes to survive for four days alone at sea.

Co-authored by psychologist and survival expert Richard Logan, readers delve into the details of how Terry Jo survived the murder of her family and what became of this brave young girl.


Coming Soon

Citizen Spy

Virtually all Confidential Informants are criminals who are saving themselves from something.  However, Robert W. Morgan, the person assigned the code name “Star,” was no criminal.  Instead, he was a rising filmmaker out of Florida who, as a loving father, objected to the sale of drugs on his daughter’s schoolyard.  When the local police brushed off his complaint, he took on that street dealer and by a peculiar twist of fate launched a personal vendetta.  In time, he would assist in exposing the brains of the Mafia’s most brilliant international cartel.  The major players included the infamous mobsters Joseph Bonanno, Meyer Lansky, and John Charles Piazza III, all with solid links to the Five Families.

Under the combined aegis of the DEA and the FBI, Morgan penetrated deeper into what would prove to be the most sophisticated money-laundering scheme in the history of international crime.

Citizen Spy is Morgan's personal story.

Can a Killer's Soul Be Saved?

Can a Killer's Soul Be Saved? is the story of one man's quest to save the soul of notorious serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer.

From prison cell No. 2, Herman Martin frantically works to convert Dahmer who resides in cell No. 1 and knows his death is rapidly approaching as the rest of the inmates can’t wait to get to him. He crawls up onto the metal sink daily to reach a small opening between the block wall and ceiling. It is through that vent that he delves into the mind and soul of Dahmer, who killed seventeen men and boys.

Can a man like Dahmer ask for peace and be forgiven in his final moments?

The Last Meal: Defending Someone Accused of Mass Murder

It took almost 10 years for investigators to arrest two men for the brutal murders of seven workers in a fast-food restaurant in suburban Chicago. The tragic events captured headlines nationwide. When the arrests finally were made, the evidence against one man was virtually irrefutable. His DNA was found on chicken bones recovered from a trash bin at Brown's Chicken and Pasta; investigators contended that he ate pieces of chicken before killing the victims - the so-called "last meal." He confessed, indicating that he got "caught up in the moment" as he slit the throat of one victim. If someone ever deserved the death sentence, he did.

The Last Meal is the story of horrific crime. It is also the riveting account of how a team of defense attorneys fought to show how their client did not commit the killings, and what happened when that failed to save him from a death sentence. This true-crime story is unique as it is written from the perspective of the defense attorneys rather than the prosecutors.
When the Easter Bunny is Naked
When the Easter Bunny is Naked begins Easter morning 1977. The Easter bunny is awake in the house
and so is author Tracy Ertl.

What follows is a riveting first-person account of sexual assault for a decade at the hands of her father.

More than 30 years later, Ertl writes about the abuse she suffered at the urging of a Nevada detective who told her she had the unprecedented chance to explain why the secret is sometimes held for decades.

Hunted at night, Tracy develops a ritual of finding dandelions to wish upon following the attacks. Tracy makes a pilgrimage to see Pope John Paul II in Rome to forgive her father for the past and move on with her life. Four months later, while taking 911 calls, she learns the Easter bunny is still naked. This time he has assaulted Tracy's own daughter.

A 16-year-old at the time of the writing, Christine Ertl sheds light on her own assault and survival at the hands of the same man who stole her mother years earlier.


HARRY - A Teenager Mass Murderer


Sixteen-year-old Harry Hebard wiped out his family line in 1963 when he killed all five members while pot roast cooked in the oven and potatoes boiled on the stove.

Co-authored by a renowned criminal profiler, walk into the mind of a killer, still alive today and continuing to serve his time.

Readers not only enter the mind and heart of Harry, but are educated in the world of killers. Stunning and timely, readers learn the difference between a mass murderer like Harry and an active shooter like Virginia Tech's Seung-Hui Cho.

Uninvited Guest
Nick Nesvacil was a high school special education teacher loved by all. But when brain cancer infiltrates his life, Nick is caught off guard.

As holes are drilled into his skull to relieve the pressure in his head and he drops to an astonishing low weight, something is happening around him.

Students, teachers and supporters rally behind him. He pulls through with the strongest of will and goes on to form Sting Cancer, a group that teaches and mobilizes high school and college students around the country to do something beyond themselves.

Ben's Box
Eight-year-old Ben Reynebeau wanted to be a published author. He wrote his first book which was awarded state and national literary awards when he was in the third grade.

In 2007, as Ben rode in a truck with his father and driven by his newly licensed older brother, cruel fate intervened.

Seventh-grader Ben lay in a coma for months.

Disabled now and still in recovery, he may never be able to communicate another story but his spirit lives on.

Brilliantly written and illustrated, Ben’s Box is a story of triumph, perseverance and the will to fulfill a lifelong dream.

Trapped: Messages from the Victims of September 11, 2001
September 11, 2001, began as just another day for telephone operators around the country. Until tragedy hit.

Unable to get help for those trapped in burning buildings several stories off the ground, telephone operators began to take down messages for the victims to their families:

“I’m OK.”
“Don’t worry.”
“I love you.”
“I’ll miss you.”

From reassurance that they will see each other again to final goodbyes, victims trust the operators with their final words for the ones they love.



Upcoming Series:


Burn Baby Burn Series: Tales from Inside the Mind of an Arsonist
A series of books focused on the stories of convicted arsonists, Book One of the Burn Baby Burn series focuses on Robin Row, a female inmate currently on death row.

Missing, But Not Forgotten: Stories from Lost Childhood
Missing, But Not Forgotten: Stories from Lost Childhood, is a series that tells the stories of missing and exploited children across the United States.


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