“Too Close To Call” by Leighton L. Smith is now available for purchase

““All this has me reliving it all over again and it doesn’t feel any better now than it did the first time.” She sat up and her face flushed pink with emotion.”
– an excerpt from the book
– an excerpt from the book
AR Press is honored to publish “Too Close To Call” by Leighton L. Smith. The book is now available on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and the ARPress website.
Author Leighton Lloyd Smith. Mr. Smith is a senior systems engineer and ergonomist and has been writing for more than 40 years. He is the author of more than 1,000 technical publications ranging from by-laws, business plans, technical proposals, and reports to safety plans, risk management plans, and long-range plans.
Recently, Mr. Smith has taken up freelance writing. He has created the Ian Learns… children’s book series. In addition to “Too Close to Call,” he has authored four other novels and is working on a fifth. He has also authored four non-fiction works. Mr. Smith’s “signature” as an author is that his novels all have four-word titles and that these four words occur only once in each novel, as the last four words.
In the story “Too Close To Call,” homicides are down in the cities, but accidental death rates are up. Why? Buf Collins investigates and gets embroiled in presidential re-election politics.
William Buford (Buf) Collins, VI, is trying to help an old friend find out what happened to her husband, who turned up dead in a hotel room. They are sure that he was murdered, but the city officials do not agree. There was no gunshot or knife wound. So, according to them, it’s an accidental death.
It turns out there is a lot of this going around in all the major U.S. cities.
Someone in the FBI notices this and writes a report, and the sitting president appoints a special prosecutor to look into the matter.
Buf Collins’ father-in-law is a very wealthy and powerful man, and he gets the president to name Buf Collins as the special prosecutor. The opposing party suddenly loses its presumptive nominee for the presidential election, and the old man somehow is able to get Buf nominated! Crazy!
The president is now in a classic political quandary: He appointed Collins to look into the possibility of corruption in the cities, but now his appointee is his opponent. He can’t dismiss him, as this would look like he is using his power to his own advantage. And, as Collins is unable to get a continuance on the case, he is precluded from campaigning.
The judge in the case decides to let the media cameras into the courtroom. The president feels like he can’t compete with Collins, who is fighting city hall on national television and seems to be winning. So, he tries to undermine Collins’ case in order to ensure that he loses and thus looks bad to the public. He gets the charges to be upgraded from corruption to conspiracy. But Collins is ready and handles the change seamlessly. Then, the president gets the Attorney General to upgrade the charges from conspiracy to cover-up. And Collins handles this as well.
All the time, the election is getting closer and closer. . .
“Too Close To Call” by Leighton L. Smith is now available for purchase via ARPress Bookstore: https://authorreputationpress.com/bookstore/too-close-to-call/.
