About the Book
Title: The Inconvenient Unborn
Author: David Carter
Genre: Family Drama / Political Thriller
England in the near
future –
Though you may not
like what you see.
The Cazenoves and the
Wilsons don’t get along, leastways the parents don’t – the teenage kids adore
each other, but when the oldest Wilson girl falls pregnant, sparks fly.
Donald Cazenove just
happens to be Fred Wilson’s boss, but Fred isn’t without influence himself,
being the senior shop steward, and the business is struggling anyway, and a
strike could play havoc with Donald’s figures.
“The Inconvenient
Unborn” is set in England in the near future where after years of
austerity, a left wing Labour Party has been returned to power with a huge
majority, and they now intend to change Britain forever. They have a mandate.
They have conviction. They have momentum.
And then there’s a
state visit to Britain by the most powerful man on the planet, Yuri Premakov,
the Russian President, and his precocious and very beautiful film star wife,
Tamara, bringing gifts of gas and oil and energy, at a price, and he’s
scheduled to visit Lymington on the south coast, where most of this book is
set.
So who wins out? The
Cazenoves or the Wilsons, and what exactly are Yuri Premakov and his vast
entourage up to in Britain?
“The Inconvenient
Unborn” will take you on a journey you can barely imagine.
Author Bio
I have been writing
for longer than I care to remember. Even as a ten year old child I would design
my own newspaper and fill it with family news, much to my mother’s amusement
when she once found a copy containing a story that she didn’t fully approve of!My writing started seriously when I was in business and I was approached to write a column, and that developed into writing columns for newspapers and magazines in many fields, including computing, commodities, farming, property, sport, philately, business and small business, many of which I have actually been paid good money for, and that always brings a nice feeling that never goes away.
My syndicated online articles have now been read by over 300,000 people across the globe and show no sign of slowing down.
It was a fairly small step after that to writing books and I have now written more than a dozen, both fiction and non fiction, and I try to write and complete at least one full length book every year.
Like most writers and aspiring writers I have many more in the pipeline, both part finished, abandoned, or in an unedited state, and finding the time to complete them is always the big enemy there.
Ideally, I would like to find a literary agent who could assist me in taking my writing to the next level, so if you are out there and you like what you see and read then do please get in touch.
Besides writing I sell books for a living and currently have more than 10,000 titles in the house and please don’t ask me where they all are because the simple answer is that they are pretty much everywhere!
I am currently working on a new Inspector Walter Darriteau novel and after that I may go back to writing a sequel to Gringo Greene, though ordinarily I prefer to write something completely fresh, rather than revisiting old ground.
It always amazes me that someone like Lee Child can write book after book featuring the same character and similar adventures, though all best wishes to him for he has been incredibly successful.
Website: http://www.davidcarterbooks.co.uk/
Book Excerpt
To
put this into context, Oliver Cazenove, the guy, is eighteen going on nineteen,
and still at school, while the girl, Sue, is thirty, with a penchant for
younger men. She works behind the bar at Olly’s local pub, which is where he
met her.
Oliver was the first to leave the house at twenty to
eight. His big hair had dried, but it still had that just washed and fluffy
look, but no matter how roughly he treated it, it always seemed to fall back
into perfect place, and he was grateful for that.
He was
standing self-consciously outside Bestdas Supermarket by five to eight and
though he knew his father was not inside, many of the people who worked there
were aware he was the boss’s son. The sooner Sue arrived and whisked him away
the better, and it was five past when the cream and maroon Cayton Cerisa
whizzed up and abruptly stopped before him.
The passenger
window was open and she leant across and smiled through it and said, ‘Don’t I
know you? Would you like a lift?’
‘Damn right I
would,’ grinned Olly, as he jumped inside, as Sue hit the accelerator before
he’d even had time to plug in his belt.
‘Where do you
fancy going?’ she said, taking her eyes off the road, and glancing at the big
kid with the newly washed hair beside her. He smelt good too, looked good and
smelt good, what more could a young woman want, and she was still young too at
just thirty, though nowhere near as young as him. There was no law against it,
was there? He was old enough and perfectly legal and fit and able, and that was
all that mattered
‘Don’t mind,’
he said, ‘you choose, but somewhere away from Lymington, eh?’
‘Oh yes,’ she
said, ‘somewhere well away from here,’ and she headed across town and zipped
onto the Brockenhurst road.
The radio was
on, one of the local music stations, and The 27 Club came on.
‘Turn it up!’
he said.
‘Do you like
these?’ she said, smiling and shaking her head.
‘They are
brill, simply the best!’
‘Don’t see it
myself, don’t see what all the fuss is about.’
‘It’s
probably an age thing,’ he said, in all seriousness.
‘Oh, thanks,
Olly!’
‘Sorry, Sue,
I didn’t mean you’re old or anything, ’cos obviously you are not, but I think
they appeal more to the teens and twenties.’
‘I’m not that
long away from being a twenty,’ she pouted, and accelerated hard through the
New Forest, slowing to avoid falling foul of the obligatory radar trap.
‘I know
that,’ he said, ‘and you certainly don’t look old either, you look…’ and he
left the sentence hanging in the air.
‘Yeah? I look
what?’
He stole
another peek at her.
‘You look
absolutely fab actually, really beautiful,’ and she did too, in a low cut
skimpy summer dress that showed off her breasts wonderfully.
Sue’s mouth
fell open. Like most women she adored compliments, but one from a young kid
like Olly, so sincerely said, well that was something else. She’d always known
she’d liked him, but the way he spoke, and his appearance, and the way he
looked at her, had an effect that was indeed special.
There
followed a few moments of silence before Olly asked, ‘So, where are we going?’
‘There’s a
couple of nice pubs on the Totton road from Lyndhurst,’ she said, ‘backing onto
the forest. We could have a little walk too, if you want.’
A walk
too, if you want, he pondered on her words, in the forest on a warm
summer’s evening. What was there not like about that?
‘Great,’ he
said. ‘Suits me.’
‘Have you
eaten?’
‘Nope. You?’
‘I have not,
thought we could get a bite to eat too.’
‘Sounds good,
I’ve a huge appetite.’
‘I’ll bet you
have,’ she said, grinning across at him, and they both laughed aloud.
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