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Pamela Arnold has done it again: another fast-paced suspense thriller that slices through a multitude of dangers, always stays on track, and keeps readers intrigued.Lively seniors Biddy and Justin, with no time to unpack after returning home from an overseas assignment, are abducted and whisked away in a unique custom-designed, bullet-proof Mercedes.The action takes place between a luxurious South Australian hills estate called Landmark House and a Tokamak, an experimental machine that harnesses the energy of fusion, in Provence, France.The story embraces a multitude of interesting tech items, including Abio, a robot dog, which Justin’s dog, a Japanese Chin named Puffer, considers it nothing more than a retarded cousin that does tricks with a ball. There’s also Toots, a Google driverless car, in which Biddy traps an assassin, and Oso is a beautiful and sexy humanoid that’s been enhanced with an extra sex app.Biddy and Justin, expecting to enjoy a little R&R, are instead swept into action at the Adelaide Zoo, due to a terrorist threat. Going undercover, Biddy poses as an elderly blind woman accompanied by her seeing eye dog, which in reality is an attack dog.About the Author: After retiring from running her own successful business at age 75, Pamela M. Arnold discovered the fun of writing. Frenzy in Frome Road is the fourth in her senior sleuth suspense series. It is often suggested that the Australian author, now 83, should write her memoirs. Her reply is an adamant, “No way, even the suggestion might alarm some people!”Publisher’s website: http://sbpra.com/PamelaMArnold
Murder by Drone is the fifth book in the exciting Biddy and Justin Series by Pamela Arnold. This mature but lively pair of Australian espionage agents are embroiled once again with arch ISIS enemy Suzette, who entices Biddy on horseback onto the desirable next-door property ... and into a trap of attack by drone.Despite a broken wrist and head scans, Biddy refuses to stay in hospital and enlists the usual intriguing characters for help. They uncover Suzette''s scheme to kill innocent South Australian Anzac Day crowds with drone swarms.The German House described in this story is based on a century-old property that the author owned and took twelve years to restore, but it took only twenty minutes to be razed by the Ash Wednesday fire of 1983. As in the story, the author won both National Trust and State Heritage awards. Antiques were lost, but the horses were saved, as was the family dog. Badly singed, the author says of their dog, "We knew he was ours because he had one blue and one brown eye."About the Author: Upon retirement at 75 from her successful businesses in modelling, marketing, and personal development, Pamela Arnold is enjoying her retirement writing. In her youth, the mystery writer enjoyed dressage, water skiing, property restoration, and oil painting. She married her second husband on her 70th birthday, affectionately calling him "an old suitor, in both senses of the word."
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