
Edison has fashioned a beautifully crafted and near-flawless galactic war tale in turns surprising, gripping and amusing. I so loved this book and can not wait for its sequel, may there be many!
Amazon 5-star review
A model of close research, fast-paced action and exhilarating deadpan dialogue.
Amazon 5-star review
~ Woman at War ~

Endgame (Woman at War, 1)
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A winter wasteland. Its rare fuel. The war machine storms in.
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Sniper Captain June Vereeth never wanted to lead soldiers, and she certainly didn’t want to go fight on Preciless 75. But luck deals a cruel fate, and the impossible happens. Victory comes with a disastrous price.
Vereeth and four soldiers find themselves stranded some 70 million miles behind enemy lines. They have no radio, little food and no way off. The planet's dangerous predators are getting closer. Best of all, their merciless enemies—the Mitasterites—are returning by the thousands.
P-75 is a harsh world full of amazing discoveries for the adventurous. Will it become their tomb, as well?
The realistic depictions of battle show the impact on both the grand scale and on the personal level. Edison has a strong prose style with touches of mordant humor. This had a surprisingly emotional ending and I really enjoyed it.
Amazon 5-star review
June Vereeth is back, and badder than ever.
Amazon 5-star review
~ Woman at War ~

Destruction (Woman at War, 2)
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The war is not going well.
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Captain June Vereeth and fellow sharpshooter Prubius are sent on a maddening fool's-errand mission, where they find inhospitable conditions and problematic wildlife. The quest to locate a downed freighter atop foggy mountains is a lesson in loss and powerlessness, and it puts June on a strange road of stunning allies and questionable motives.
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Soon, as she fulfills missions for the enigmatic Admiral Tohk-Mahsda (a Mitasterite defector) June becomes deeply embroiled for the struggle which could determine the outcome of the war. She rightfully fears the approach of her own destruction--by Mitasterite hands or by her own.
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Edison delivers a solid adventure tale that takes his soccer hero on a wild ride through the treacherous Amazon jungle. Great weekend read when you want to get your mind off your own problems and root for someone else.
Amazon 5-star review
Tempest Road is a solid read - the last half of the novel especially keeps you burning through pages as the complexity of the unlucky MacLeod’s situation keeps escalating.
Amazon 5-star review

Tempest Road
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The incredible has happened. The U.S. Men's soccer team has stunned the world and won the F.I.F.A. World Cup. The hero was MacLeod, a backup striker who punched in two last-minute goals.
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Three years later, MacLeod is with the team in Panama to kick off World Cup qualifying. Everything is right with the world...until it isn't. He wakes chained to a chair in an apartment. Soon, he's being marched at gunpoint through the wild Colombian jungle.
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Innocent man. Hard-working American. Honest professional. Trapped in a game of blame and blood, all of MacLeod's survival skills are put to the test. Will they be enough to help him escape Tempest Road?
Part dark and moody, part psychological thriller - The Churning makes for great reading for those who like to get just a little taste - but not quite touch - the dark side of real life.
Amazon 5-star review
The shear will of Hessabi to overcome and survive everything that is thrown at him is admirable, to say the least. The twist and turns throughout the book keep you on your toes and turning the pages.
Amazon 5-star review

The Churning
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Persian-American soccer star Arman Hessabi wakes in chains in a house of enemies. Driven in part by an abusive older brother, the self-centered hero feels his life is complete with the glory, women and riches afforded by a Premier League striker’s lifestyle.
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However, Hessabi he meets his match in Fat Man, Captain, Huck and Kay—four men who hold him in thrall, somewhere in Europe.
Through trials and memories, Hessabi comes to question his own ego and position in life. But is it too late for a world-famous athlete with no apparent power over his own fate?
