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EASY RAWLINS CROSSED WITH DIRTY HARRY ON A FAR-FLUNG SPACE COLONY! A search for a missing woman exposes a conspiracy that could threaten an entire planet. Cassandra Blake, an employee for the Ascension Planetary Holdings Group--the largest and most powerful corporation in Nova Columbia--has gone missing. And her sister wants to know why. When questions need answering on Nova Columbia, Detective Ezekiel "Easy" Novak is the man folks turn to. He gets results--one way or another.
But what begins as a routine missing person case quickly turns into something much bigger and more sinister, with implications that could affect the entire planet. It seems Cassandra wasn't just investigating her employer. She had uncovered a secret effort to excavate and exploit an ancient alien artifact known only as The Seraph.
Soon, Easy finds himself trying to unravel a conspiracy that may implicate not only Ascension, but the cultlike Cosmic Ontological Foundation--and the highest echelons of the Terran Confederation itself.
Praise for Trouble Walked In: "Anyone who loves everything from
The Big Sleep to
Blade Runner, or needs a fix while waiting for the next installment in
The Dresden Files or
Monster Hunters International, will feel right at home between these pages." --
Upstream Reviews "Kupari is a skilled tradesman, deftly creating characters that are easy to get invested in and easy to care for. You will cheer at their successes and commiserate with them in their failures, for they feel oh so real despite living years and parsecs away from us this year." --
Warped Factor Praise for Mike Kupari: "After co-writing
Dead Six and
Swords of Exodus with Larry Correia, Kupari makes his solo debut with this space opera that is bound to attract fans of Mike Shepherd's Kris Longknife series or Elizabeth Moon's Vatta's War books. An excellent choice for both teen and adult sf readers." --
Library Journal on
Her Brother's Keeper "A big, sweeping space adventure, with heroic characters you care about. Mike Kupari is an awesome storyteller." --Larry Correia on
Sins of Her Father