The Color of Greed

Jack Thompson

Book 1 of Raja Williams

Language: English

Published: Jul 22, 2012

Pages: 208
ABC: 2

Description:

** What do a private detective, a hacker and an assassin have in common? The desire to help when justice needs a hand.**

Neither the dark, tragic anti-hero nor the James Bond super-hero type, Raja is a wealthy Oxford-educated PI of mixed Caribbean descent who possesses a strong empathic power and a sixth sense for evil that gives him headaches and steers him straight into trouble. His partner Vinny Moore is a gorgeous hipster geek who prefers hacking computers to haute couture.

The young husband of a wealthy heiress is found dead on his yacht floating off the California coastline. His death is ruled an accident and the case is closed. The grieving widow, certain her husband was murdered but getting no help from the police, turns to Raja Williams who has dedicated his resources to help those in need of justice.

When Raja arrives in Los Angeles and more bodies begin to pile up, he suspects a coverup that may go as high up as the governor. With the help of his partner Vinny, a highly skilled hacker, Raja must unravel the case before everyone involved, including the two of them, winds up dead.

A colorful cast of characters, great dialogue and a suspenseful twisting plot make The Color of Greed an entertaining read. This is the first book in the Raja Williams series.

**** Get the first three books in the Raja Williams series for just $5.99. Search Amazon for "Raja Williams Books 1-3" ****

Raja Williams Mystery Series Categories:

Mystery Series
Private Investigator Series
Private Detective Novels
Mystery Thrillers
Thriller Suspense Novel
Thriller
Crime Fiction
Crime Series
Private Detective Novels
Detective
Private Eye
Traditional

**

### Review

**Book of the Month October 2012
A Classic Thriller – Review by Mike Smith**
A few weeks ago I caught an old episode of the Rockford Files on one of the gazillion channels that we have these days and it took me back to the golden era of detective shows on TV: Ironsides, Columbo, Kojak. They don’t make ‘em like that any more … or do they?
The Color Of Greed isn’t going to win the Booker prize, but I don’t suppose the author, Jack Thompson, had that in mind when he created his private investigator, Raja Williams. The story’s leading man is a wealthy, Oxford-educated philanthropist of Jamaican descent who tells it like it is, but, underneath the blunt exterior, he wants to catch the bad guys.
Jack Thompson doesn’t stray far from the beaten track of the classic detective thriller: a rich heiress wants the death of her husband investigated but the police are denying that there was any evidence of foul play. Raja Williams takes the case – no payment required as he already has his own private jet and money to burn.
In running e-thriller.com I get to read – or at least start – a number of books that follow this proven formula, but The Color Of Greed is well-written, has a good plot and the dialogue works. And yes, we would all like to be Raja Williams with a private jet and the ladies falling at our feet.
Jack Thompson gives his readers what they want: a good plot with a central character painted in bold colours. Who loves ya, baby?!

### From the Author

**Q & A with Jack Thompson**

*Q: How would you describe this book?*
The Color of Greed is a mystery thriller introducing Raja Williams, a private investigator, and his sidekick Vinny, a skilled computer hacker. Although the story starts as a simple murder mystery whodunit, it quickly leads Raja into a multi-layered tale of intrigue. It's an old-fashioned detective story with current themes.

*Q: What makes the Raja Williams series so popular?*
It doesn't have the perverse, graphic violence or explicit sex that dominates too much contemporary fiction. It's good, clean fun.

*Q: What inspired you to write the Raja Williams series?*
I'm a fan of hard-boiled mysteries and wanted to try my hand at creating an enjoyable crime-fighting duo. I've always enjoyed the banter between two lead characters regardless of genre. I'm reminded of the Lethal Weapon series of movies. The character interaction sets the tone and carries the story.