
Part of Series
After spending 4 years in cryogenic stasis for crimes he is certain he did not commit, Jake Cardigan is mysteriously released. Finding himself lost in a world that has changed since his incarceration, Jake tries and put his life back together. His wife and son are gone, or in hiding, and Jake fights the urge to self-medicate using a digital drug called Tek. Offered a job to locate a missing enigmatic scientist, Jake can already feel the puppet strings manipulating him to return to the life that got him jailed in the first place. And his troubles are only beginning! The epic futuristic adventure, based on William Shatner's best-selling TekWar novel series. Finding Dr. Leon Kittridge is proving more elusive and more costly to find than Jake Cardigan ever thought. Recovering from a blast that nearly killed him, Jake's determination to find answers leads him to old acquaintances and deadly consequences. In this third chapter of the TekWar series, based on the best selling novels by William Shatner, the stakes have gotten considerably higher and new shocking revelations about the secrets of Tek and Jake's quest for vindication are unveiled.
Authors


Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name. Please see: Scott Davis Scott Davis lost his battle with brain cancer on February 10, 2024, in Hillsboro, Oregon, at the age of 59. He is survived by his wife, Martha, his two children, Emma and Brett, his father Sheldon, and his brother Darren. Born in East Meadow, New York, on June 30, 1964, he moved to California as a teenager, where he met his lifelong friend, Steve Green, and bonded over their shared love of music. He attended California State University, Northridge, where he nourished a love for writing that would continue throughout his life. After college, he met his wife at a bus stop in the pouring rain, when Martha offered to share her umbrella with him and wrote her number in his copy of a Stephen King novel. Martha and Scott spent over 20 years in the town of Poway, California, where Scott worked in the marketing field in companies throughout San Diego County. Scott wrote several successful comic books, usually building on his interest in mythology and science fiction, they moved to Hillsboro, Oregon to live closer to Scott’s family, and Scott actively participated in softball until his illness. source: obituary from TidalWave Productions