
They threatened her family. She loaded her shotgun. It's barely 7:00 a.m., and Bayou Meutrier Fish & Game officer Sarah Ripley has already had a rough day. After a pre-dawn raid on a meth shack in the local game preserve, all she wants to do is to go home and flop into bed. But her university dean husband is running late, and their fifteen-year-old son needs a ride to the Lab School on campus. So Ripley takes off her gun belt and puts on her mom cape. Again. Naturally, today’s the day that Louisiana A&M's expensive new campus alert system goes haywire. Is there a gas leak? Toxic Spill? Active shooter? The authorities are stumped, and all Ripley knows is that she’s barely had breakfast, both her son and her husband are caught in a chaotic campus evacuation, and she has no way of contacting either one of them. Unfortunately for Ripley and her family, the chaos isn’t just it’s cover. A diversion for terrorists who turn out not to be terrorists at all but thieves targeting the priceless traveling art exhibition in the campus gallery. So while every other man, woman, and child is hustling to evacuate the university, Ripley is headed back in—again—with fresh shells in her twelve-gauge and determination on her face. Thus begins the longest day of Sarah Ripley's life. Often gritty, sometimes steamy, always fast-paced, Conquistador is the new action thriller from the Edgar and Anthony Award nominated author Victor Gischler.
Author

Victor Gischler is an American author of humorous crime fiction. Gischler's debut novel Gun Monkeys was nominated for the Edgar Award, and his novel Shotgun Opera was an Anthony Award finalist. His work has been translated into Italian, French, Spanish and Japanese. He earned a Ph.D. in English at the University of Southern Mississippi. His fifth novel Go-Go Girls of the Apocalypse was published in 2008 by the Touchstone/Fireside imprint of Simon & Schuster. He has also writes American comic books like The Punisher: Frank Castle, Wolverine and Deadpool for Marvel Comics. Gischler worked on X-Men "Curse of the Mutants" starting in the Death of Dracula one-shot and continued in X-Men #1. Gun Monkeys has been optioned for a film adaptation, with Lee Goldberg writing the script and Ryuhei Kitamura penciled in to direct.