A Murder Too Personal

A Murder Too Personal by Gerald J. Davis, published by iUniverse in October 2000, is a 200-page work of fiction that delves into the realms of mystery and suspense. The narrative follows Ed Rogan, a private investigator, as he grapples with the murder of his ex-wife, which has left him as the prime suspect. Driven by guilt and a thirst for revenge, Rogan’s investigation leads him into the shadowy corners of Wall Street and corporate intrigue, where he confronts a world filled with deceit and hidden agendas.
Readers will find themselves immersed in a gripping tale that explores themes of betrayal and the complexities of personal relationships. As Rogan navigates through a web of corporate malfeasance and encounters a cast of polished executives harboring dark secrets, he unravels not only the mystery of his ex-wife’s death but also the unsettling realization that he may not have truly known her at all. This edition presents a compelling narrative that challenges perceptions of identity and trust within the backdrop of a thrilling police procedural.
Official synopsis Publisher
THIS TIME IT’S PERSONAL. MONEY, SEX, MURDER. His ex-wife is dead. The cops think he did it. Ed Rogan, tough as nails and twice as sharp, is a private investigator of malfeasance in the corporate world. The enigmatic case he’s working on in A MURDER TOO PERSONAL takes on a very personal aspect when he searches for the murderer of his ex-wife. Someone has thoughlessly put a bullet into the back of her head and Rogan is driven by the twin fiery demons of guilt and revenge to find her killer. His exciting quest leads him through the netherworld of Wall Street and corporate board rooms where vermin in Armani suits crawl along the underside of a glittering world where nothing is as it appears. The suspects are golden, well-groomed executive types with deadly secrets of greed, betrayal and lust locked up in their expensive, highly-polished mahagany desks. As he tracks down the murderer in a dangerous and suspenseful pursuit, Rogan rips apart layer after layer of surprises about the woman he was married to. Along the way he discovers she was not the wife he thought he knew, which leads him to the unanswerable question, “Do we ever really know another person?”
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