Perilous Treasure

4.6     based on 1,408 Amazon ratings
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I feel like I keep writing the same review over and over but these book are just so captivating! This is my fourth Jack Turner Suspense Series Book I've read and I'm hooked. I don't want to read about graphic blood and guts, profanity or sex and these books are suspenseful and keep me quickly turning the pages without all that stuff. I highly recommended this series and I can't wait to start the next one!! Happy reading 😊
Jonathan luce, Goodreads Review
What a treasure hunt! Perilous Treasure by Dan Walsh was a fascinating addition to his Jack Turner's series. I would even suggest it could be my favorite one yet. There is four to five different point of views that move seamlessly. I had no problem distinguishing any of them even though they take place over seventy years. I really liked the World War II past and how it draws to the present as Jack Turner hunts for buried treasure from World War II and the Nazi's. I loved how Walsh created a story that seemed pretty simple and made it not simple but captured my attention the whole time. I flipped anxiously through the story, wanting to see who would end up with the buried treasure. It was a great way to spend the time. If you enjoy World War II novels or non-stop actions in your story, then this is the book for you. I highly recommend this novel.
Kelly Bridgewater, Goodreads Review
I have really enjoyed this Jack Turner series, and I’d be hard pressed to say which was my favorite. Dan Walsh does historical fiction, especially WWII fiction, very well. Only part of it was historic though, the part that lead up to a treasure taken from Nazis and it being buried in Georgia. From there it goes missing for about 70 years. I loved the storyline focusing on the metal detecting hobby. It was unique and fun, which also turned out to be a real page turner! Very good book!
Joleen, Goodreads Review
About the author

“What do you wanna be when you grow up?”

Kids get asked that question all the time. When my son was five, he knew. “I wanna be a green Batman.” By high school I knew. I wanted to be an author of novels. My composition teacher was the spark that lit this fire. She went out of her way to encourage my feeble offerings. “You could really be a writer if you wanted to,” she said. Secretly, I began to write poems and short stories. Only my teacher and mother could read them (such things clashed badly with the surfer-guy persona I’d worked so hard to fabricate at school).

After becoming a Christian, my attention shifted in a different direction. I met Cindi, my wife-to-be. Then came a call to pastoral ministry. Then fatherhood. I still loved to write, but found little time for it. In the mid-90′s, we decided I needed a relaxing hobby. Cindi suggested I start writing again. I read some great how-to books and found some wonderful friends on a Christian fiction writer’s board on AOL (back when AOL was the Internet). A year later, my first novel was complete.

It was soon picked up by a top literary agent, but she found it difficult to market. Not much interest back then in a faith-based suspense thriller with a military edge. Shortly after that, the idea for The Unfinished Gift came to me…. Read on.

envelope - contact Dan Walsh
I’d love to hear from you. You can email me at dan@danwalshbooks.com or connect with me on social media.
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