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The Will to Die: A Novel of Suspense
The Will to Die: A Novel of Suspense
The Will to Die: A Novel of Suspense
Audiobook8 hours

The Will to Die: A Novel of Suspense

Written by Joe Pulizzi

Narrated by Kyle Tait

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

About this audiobook

When Will Pollitt returns home for his father’s funeral, he discovers a string of similar deaths — and his family’s connection to a shocking conspiracy.

“A roller-coaster ride from beginning to end.” – New York Times bestselling author Jay Baer

“A top-shelf crime thriller.” – BestThrillers.com

“I didn’t want to stop.” – Mystery Suspense Reviews

Gambling tore my marriage and family apart. All I have left is my marketing agency and my friend and business partner Robbie. He drinks too much.

If we don’t win this deal, a whole lotta bad is going to happen.

But I just found out my dad died. And his friends are dropping like flies! Sleepy Sandusky, Ohio is hiding a deep, dark secret.

I think everyone is in on it. But am I the one that’s crazy? Some people are trying to kill me! Am I going insane…or am I about to die?

"Joe Pulizzi hits it out of the park with The Will to Die." – IndieReader (IR Approved)

LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 2, 2020
ISBN9780985957667

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Reviews for The Will to Die

Rating: 3.9374999875 out of 5 stars
4/5

8 ratings1 review

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The last three books have informed me of unknown subjects. The Will to Die exposes the demise of private funeral homes due to more people electing cremation over embalming. I also learned about life insurance policies becoming insurance settlements and the deception of these policies. The Will to Die details rampant white supremacy in smaller towns, and the policing and scrutiny of citizens. The story line races and intensifies as Will Pollitt learns what is happening in Sandusky, Ohio. Another funeral director/owner has installed himself as the Supreme Leader and like Hitler has chosen what people will populate and work in Sandusky. The story reads like 1984. Another author, Mark de Castrique, also outlines the problems of family owned funeral homes in his Barry Clayton series. I always thought that funeral homes would have business. My only distraction of The Will to Die is the lack of psychological description.