Coffin Moon
By Keith Rosson

Portland, OR. 1970s. Duane Minor is a Vietnam vet managing sobriety despite keeping bar at a Southeast dive know as the Last Call.
He and his wife, Heidi, have taken in their niece Julia a little over a year ago after her mother was served a life-sentence in upstate New York.
When the Crooked Wheel motorcycle club establishes an unsettling presence at the Last Call, Duane finds himself cornered into making some dangerous choices.
Three good things: The prose is so addictively dynamic, you’ll find this book impossible to put down. Equal parts romantic and vicious, Coffin Moon is like Interview with the Vampire and Let the Right One In meets Sons of Anarchy. Keith Rosson’s writing effortlessly plays out in the theater of your mind’s eye. I’d comfortably declare him the Stephen King of Portland, OR.
This book will grip you until the bitter end and leave you salivating for more.
Thank you to Random House for providing this book for review consideration. All opinions are my own.
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