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"Wild and free" should only be condemned in the evil world; answers will be found where only foxes dare. Originally from the first-time author's abortive 2003 manuscript, AIDS: The Twentieth-Century Hoax, this book exposes your personal absurdities that you never thought of, virtually all world absurdities included, in a style and humour that keeps you revisiting the book and sharing with everyone you know. There's something great for everyone on earth, and not a single hackneyed sentence that bores people to tears; strong and even lewd language to hammer the point home, one that you will agree with and wouldn't have in any other way; lots of love throughout the book, unconditional, unrestrained and footloose! Satires are too short, but this one is long. Let's get ready to get accused all the way but finally laugh on second thought. With subdued moderation, you can't fight vices. JUST READ ON unless want to revert to what you skipped.
When an Indian businessman, Vishal Mehta, is found murdered inside his garage in Tigoni, Limuru, Jack Chidi, an investigative reporter with The Daily Grind is called in to investigate. Jack has no idea why Mehta's wife, Anarupa Mehta, has decided to call him. She informs him that it was Mehta, who had asked her to call him should anything happen to him, a few weeks before his death, signalling that he knew his life was in danger. Who would want him dead? And why?The only way to get to the bottom of this is to dig deep into Mehta's business dealings and the secrecy surrounding the Mehtas. It is a murder case that will take him all the way to Texas, USA, and back in search of the killer or killers. In the process, he exposes major international sex-trafficking ring, prostitution and corruption here and abroad. Jack is determined to find out who killed Mehta, a quest that puts his life in danger. Can he solve the case before they get him?
Later that evening, Ali Fana, the lead detective in this case, flanked by the commissioner of Police, appeared in national TV to assure the nation that his team was on track to catch the serial killer. He looked and sounded the part of the a confident sleuth about to nab the perpetrator. He became a national figure. I on the other hand was the first to give the killings a name that caught fire: City Murders!
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