Keith Dixon Bücher
Keith Dixon ist ein vielseitiger Autor, dessen Werk mehrere Genres umfasst, darunter Thriller, Spionage, Science-Fiction und literarische Fiktion. Sein Schreiben, dem er sich seit seinen frühen Teenagerjahren widmet, zeichnet sich durch Vielfalt und Tiefe aus. Dixon erforscht verschiedene Facetten der menschlichen Erfahrung durch fesselnde Erzählungen und gekonnten Sprachgebrauch. Sein literarisches Schaffen ist geprägt von einem neugierigen Geist und einer kontinuierlichen Erkundung kreativer Wege.






Ghostfires
- 288 Seiten
- 11 Lesestunden
The story revolves around the conflicting beliefs of a husband and son regarding Linda Bascomb's death. Warren, her husband, suspects murder and grapples with his own morphine addiction and loss of medical career. In contrast, their son Ben believes Linda committed suicide while battling his own struggles with sobriety and financial instability. This tension between the two men highlights themes of addiction, grief, and the complexities of familial relationships as they navigate their differing perceptions of tragedy.
This Is How You Fall
- 256 Seiten
- 9 Lesestunden
Jacob Cameron Asprey, Jr., is the charming son of a charming crook who’s currently residing in the state pen. Strangled by family ties, Jake is barely scraping by, working as a lifeguard at the tony country club on the other side of town. He’s marking time, treading water, haunted by Sally Godstreet, the woman he’s loved all his life—the woman he should have made a life with, now orbiting just out his reach.When a local crime boss offers him a deal he’d be a fool to take and a chump to pass up, Jake sees a way out of his troubles—until his options begin to close down, and he finds himself at the heart of a dark plot that will place those he loves in harm’s way.This is How You Fall is a story of old flames, old debts, and a new twist on an old con. Part-heist, part-love story, and part-literary noir thriller, it's a moody rumination on identity and loyalty, with dazzing plot twists that lead to an inevitable, destructive conclusion.
Killing The Invisible: The Porthaven Trilogy: Book 2
- 440 Seiten
- 16 Lesestunden
Detective Inspector Walter Watts tries not to let personal feelings interfere with the needs of his job. But when a young girl is found murdered on a barren stretch of wasteland in Porthaven, a tourist destination for thousands of visitors, he finds he can't isolate himself from the feelings the girl's death provokes. Soon his complicated private and public lives are intermingled and he must decide what is more important to him-solving the crime or keeping his job. He realises there can only be one answer. The problem is that he doesn't know what it is
Delving into the mind of a serial killer, this crime thriller offers a complex and captivating narrative that keeps readers on the edge of their seats. The intricate plot weaves together suspense and psychological depth, exploring the motivations and methods of a masterful murderer. With thrilling twists and turns, it promises a gripping experience for fans of the genre.
Acclimatising to higher ground
- 256 Seiten
- 9 Lesestunden
Kinship serves as the cornerstone of atoll societies, both traditional and modern, as they face challenges like droughts, rough seas, and rising sea levels. This book offers a multidisciplinary, retrospective analysis of a Pacific Atoll People living across various countries, emphasizing how their shared notions of kinship bind them together as a diaspora. It explores the unique cultural and social dynamics that sustain their communities amid environmental threats.
Exploring the interplay between knowledge and social thought, Keith Dixon critiques both traditional and contemporary sociology of knowledge, highlighting fallacies in reducing knowledge to mere ideology. The book delves into theories by Marx and Mannheim, alongside discussions on the sociology of science and religious belief. It culminates in a thorough conclusion that examines the foundations and limitations of the sociology of knowledge, making it a valuable resource for sociology students seeking a deeper understanding of these concepts.
There is no rhyme or reason behind the final choice of games from Blues' history - a few selected themselves Cup Final appearances; trips into Europe, promotions but the vast majority are there just because they will mean something to Blues' supporters. O
Bad Blood is a completely biased look at the second city football rivalry through the eyes of a Bluenose. It shows up all of the areas where Birmingham City outperform Aston Villa - the wins, the goals, the players. As a BLUENOSE, Keith Dixon has spent his supporting life living in the shadows of Birmingham City’s arch enemy – Aston Villa. More titles, cups, seasons in the Premier league, bigger stadium, larger transfer deals, more books. BAD BLOOD is intended to redress the balance – a totally biased record of every aspect of football in which THE BLUES “beat “THE VILE” – all the victories, all the statistics, all the players, all the ways the Blues are better than the claret and blue! So what’s in the book for the BLUENOSE? – a report on every win over the Villa – every goal scored against the Villa – there are comments from Paul Tait and Robert Hopkins – with no punches pulled – and details of all players to have played for both clubs. Blues fans will buy the book as a record of our limited supremacy over the Villa, whilst Villa fans will buy it – to burn it! This is a history which denies fairness, extols bias and praises only the team that carries the city’s name!