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Turkey Creek (Whispering Pines Book 7)
The Revenge (Whispering Pines Book 2)
The Beginning (Whispering Pines Book 1)
Ebook series9 titles

Whispering Pines Series

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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About this series

Book 9, "June Bug and the Devil," shines brightly as the newest addition to the growing family of the Whispering Pines suspense/paranormal series. This latest adventure is one of the most matchless of the growing series from author Charles E. Wells.

"June Bug" captures the reader inside a plausible world of paranormal tinged suspense, bone jarring excitement, and nail chewing drama.

The plot challenges mainstream theological beliefs about life beyond death and the ability of evil to control the living. The plot lets the reader decide and find their own unique personal conclusion without starting a war between the factions of heaven's promises and hell's consequences. The bottom line argument is whether a good soul suffers when an evil presence lives inside the same body.

As with all Whispering Pines stories, each book stands alone. There are no cliff hangers to create confusion for the reader no matter where in the series they start. One can follow their fancy to pick any title as a starting point because their uniquely constructed layout and plots pays special attention in each book to make sure that no readers left behind in confusion.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherCharles Wells
Release dateOct 22, 2011
Turkey Creek (Whispering Pines Book 7)
The Revenge (Whispering Pines Book 2)
The Beginning (Whispering Pines Book 1)

Titles in the series (9)

  • The Beginning (Whispering Pines Book 1)

    1

    The Beginning (Whispering Pines Book 1)
    The Beginning (Whispering Pines Book 1)

    Chuck Veal has not heard from his brother in Georgia in over a week and nobody answers the home phone or cell. An employee at the timber mill his brother owns gives him run around answers and the local Sheriff refuses to post a missing person report. With his gut instincts screaming "trouble," Chuck spills his fears to a female co-worker who unexpectedly offers to help. She wants to go with him to Georgia and lend a hand searching for his brother. Little does Chuck realize, she is ESP sensitive and already knows more than she can tell. With few clues to go by, Chuck starts following his brother's clues, starting at the old family cemetery and things go downhill from there. His presence creates a head on collision with small town influencers and power brokers that have left a deadly trail of murder, deceit, and mayhem. Everything from the Atlanta drug cartel to the murderess of his Grandfather sixty years earlier, comes into play. "The Beginning" anchors a full boatload of Whispering Pines books ahead about the Veal family trials and tribulations. It is a fast paced, edge of your seat thriller for all ages. Rated PG.

  • Turkey Creek (Whispering Pines Book 7)

    Turkey Creek (Whispering Pines Book 7)
    Turkey Creek (Whispering Pines Book 7)

    Gail Veal is sent back in a vision to save her own future. The action in Turkey Creek, book seven of the Whispering Pines Thriller/Suspense series takes place in two time frames, each clearly marked to avoid confusion, so the readers are getting two independent stories that collide near the end. Walk from the present back to the Georgia era of 1862, in a combination of modern day thriller and old west shoot out. This southern flavored story is fried to a golden brown and ready to serve. All of your favorite characters are here along with a few unexpected visitors as well. This book stands alone or can be read as a part of the series, either way, it's suspense and thrilling reading from cover to cover.

  • The Revenge (Whispering Pines Book 2)

    The Revenge (Whispering Pines Book 2)
    The Revenge (Whispering Pines Book 2)

    Whispering Pines "The Revenge is book 2 in the 9 books (and counting) thriller/suspense series by Author Charles E. Wells. It's a southern flavored fast paced "small town vs big city" crime adventure series centered in Georgia USA. Each book in the series stands alone with no cliff hangers. Read one or read them all in order. Exciting edge of your seat enjoyment for all ages. Rated PG.

  • The Garden Patch (Whispering Pines Book 6)

    The Garden Patch (Whispering Pines Book 6)
    The Garden Patch (Whispering Pines Book 6)

    Whispering Pines "The Garden Patch" is book six in the six books (and counting) thriller/suspense series by Author Charles E. Wells. It's a southern flavored fast paced "small town vs big city" crime adventure series centered in Georgia USA. Each book in the series stands alone with no cliff hangers. Read one or read them all in order. Exciting edge of your seat enjoyment for all ages. Rated PG

  • Rebel Gold (Whispering Pines Book 3)

    Rebel Gold (Whispering Pines Book 3)
    Rebel Gold (Whispering Pines Book 3)

    Whispering Pines "Rebel Gold" is book three in the six books (and counting) thriller/suspense series by Author Charles E. Wells. It's a southern flavored fast paced "small town vs big city" crime adventure series centered in Georgia USA. Each book in the series stands alone with no cliff hangers. Read one or read them all in order. Exciting edge of your seat enjoyment for all ages. Rated PG.

  • Cotton Tears (Whispering Pines Book 4)

    Cotton Tears (Whispering Pines Book 4)
    Cotton Tears (Whispering Pines Book 4)

    Whispering Pines "Cotton Tears" is book four in the 9 books (and counting) thriller/suspense series by Charles E. Wells. ESP tinged and drama salted stand alone novel series centered in Georgia USA. Each book stands alone with no cliff hangers. Read one or read them all in order. Exciting edge of your seat enjoyment for all ages.

  • Indian Giver (Whispering Pines Book 5)

    Indian Giver (Whispering Pines Book 5)
    Indian Giver (Whispering Pines Book 5)

    "Indian Giver" does not mean to take back as the modern definition implies. To the inhabitants of the ancient river Indian tribes around mid and South Georgia, Indian giver means a person who is bearing a gift to another and expecting one in return. This book and title by author Charles Wells is a two edged sword and carries both definitions to a nail biting climax. The book starts with murder and from there things get worse. The land with the Indian ruins involved is about to be flooded by the rising waters from a new hydroelectric dam. The owners of the investment company who built it well know the truth about the land's historical value and are willing to resort to murder to protect their millions. Gail Veal's psychic abilities are maxed out when she steps up between the ancient spirits and modern demons of greed. All involved end up fighting for their lives with their backs to the impassible swamps and the river banks. As always, Indian Giver is a fast paced, hard hitting edge of your seat reading suitable for YA and intended for all ages; rated PG.

  • Digital Detective (Whispering Pines Book 8)

    Digital Detective (Whispering Pines Book 8)
    Digital Detective (Whispering Pines Book 8)

    A Private Investigator's best friend dies of cancer but not before his memory and personality are transferred into a mainframe computer system of his own design. Along with the prime characters of the Whispering Pines Suspense Series, watch a murder investigation take place in a manner you never envisioned.

  • June Bug and the Devil (Book 9)

    June Bug and the Devil (Book 9)
    June Bug and the Devil (Book 9)

    Book 9, "June Bug and the Devil," shines brightly as the newest addition to the growing family of the Whispering Pines suspense/paranormal series. This latest adventure is one of the most matchless of the growing series from author Charles E. Wells. "June Bug" captures the reader inside a plausible world of paranormal tinged suspense, bone jarring excitement, and nail chewing drama. The plot challenges mainstream theological beliefs about life beyond death and the ability of evil to control the living. The plot lets the reader decide and find their own unique personal conclusion without starting a war between the factions of heaven's promises and hell's consequences. The bottom line argument is whether a good soul suffers when an evil presence lives inside the same body. As with all Whispering Pines stories, each book stands alone. There are no cliff hangers to create confusion for the reader no matter where in the series they start. One can follow their fancy to pick any title as a starting point because their uniquely constructed layout and plots pays special attention in each book to make sure that no readers left behind in confusion.

Author

Charles Wells

I was asked why I'm a writer and responded with the following. I didn't choose writing, it chose me. I've spent the better part of my life (and I'm 60 years old) writing, but I still hesitate to call myself an Author. I've written and published seven books, six are fiction, and still I don't feel like a writer because I don't fit my mental image of one. I don't feel compelled to be the next Mark Twain or Tom Clancy. I don't want to get filthy rich from my writing and I don't care for the glory of being recognized while walking down the street. All I want to do is entertain people and hold that wisp of power and control knowing I can make you laugh, or make you cry. I can take you to heaven or send you straight to hell, all with a few words placed appropriately. I can do in one paragraph what God needs seven days to accomplish. Best of all, I can make you think great thoughts or I can help you dream in a reality that I create. A reality you can enjoin or not with the flip of a book cover or press of a digital reader button. All of this isn't writing, it's insanity and escape for the sake of entertainment.http://www.charleswells.usBefore turning to fiction writing, Wells spent most of his career as a newspaper reporter and journalist in middle Georgia. He covered everything from high school sports to front page news stories. During the last fourteen years of his career he worked as Managing Editor for “The Robins Review” a military town’s 25,000 weekly edition publication. The city’s mixed population of civilian and military called for a unique brand of writing skills that Wells found comfortable supplying. The highlight of his career was in 1988 when a sharply written article was picked up by the national wire services and republished around the world. The topic was the advance of technology in the Air Force’s electronic warfare division and aptly titled “Stone Age to Star Wars.” Copies of the article made it to the desk of then President Ronald Regan who had initially emblazoned the term into the minds of the world.The article also caught the attention of an NBC News Producer as well as ABC’s nightline’s Associate Producer, Terry Irving. The sad news through it all was that just as Wells’ writing career was taking off, his personal world was “going south and silent.” Plagued since childhood by an ongoing progressive hearing loss, Charles Wells lost all usable hearing and went completely deaf. When the handicap peaked, Wells found it impossible to function for the newspaper any longer and resigned at age 38. He fell back on his original “day job” returning to work as an electronics technician at the same military base where he once “entertained the troops.” When his hearing problems also unraveled his efforts there, he threw in the towel, took a disability from service and dropped out of sight for three long years.During that time he switched his writing presentations from the “pomp and ceremony” of print to the more open and space filling approach of the www. The writing needs of that medium grew to an insatiable level as more and more quality articles and information was needed to fill the millions of web pages springing up online. Best of all, those markets offered Wells a “deaf friendly” environment in which to work. He began his new career using old skills after refocusing his talents and adjusting them to the new technology and class of readers it presented. By swapping pen and paper for a keyboard and mouse, he positioned himself on the cusped of the informational highway. Still, he needed to crack the shell and get inside the medium which meant calling on his reputation as an old print writer and trying to capture the younger audiences of the internet.Normally bashful about self promotion, Wells shamelessly flaunted his accomplishments from the newspapers and soon gained the attention of higher ups in the news organizations that were testing the waters to see if there really was an audience online. All those “loud noises” made during his print career opened the doors for Wells and landed him a “digital online” job with CNN News of Atlanta. His “computer based” job description became one of the first “telecommuter” jobs in the world and for the next year he worked from home full time.CNN’s bold move to the internet was followed by a joint venture between computer software giant Microsoft and television’s NBC network. The two companies formed what is today MSNBC and then took CNN’s internet/TV interactive format and ran it deeper into the digital realms of society. Both networks quickly discovered the power behind having instant viewer response taken from “online news chat rooms.” MSNBC realized it faster and quickly moved the concept deeper passing CNN’s online presence during the second year of operations. After that, MSNBC became the envy of every news operation on earth especially to those wanting to work for them on the computer. Wells, still with CNN when MSNBC went flying past, watched and waited, trying to gauge the right moment to attempt a jump over to MSNBC. That moment came when MSNBC hired ABC’s Terry Irving and put him in charge of the “Don Imus in the Morning” simulcast show on the network. Irving’s first order of the day was to start an online interactive chat room and the man he wanted to operate it was Charles Wells. He had quietly spent a lot of time online in the CNN chats and had watched how well Charles had interacted and inspired comments from the users, comments that quite often made it to the bottom of any given news show’s TV’s screen as well.Wells enjoyed the interactivity and fun dealing with regular people online and relaying their questions and responses over to the on air television people. Best of all, his handicap wasn’t an issue or a problem. It never interfered with his work because one didn’t need to hear the words spoken. His computer scrolled them across his screen flawlessly. Still, Wells was a writer at heart and the tug to write fiction adventure stories was still strong but dormant.During the year he stayed at CNN he was constantly asking for web space in which he could write short journalistic features, a concept that today is referred to as “Blogging.” Wells idea was simply too far ahead of the times and his idea fell on deaf yet hearing ears at CNN. When he persisted and then demanded the space, his manager made it clear that CNN was not interested and to not mention it again. They felt that online readers would never sit still long enough to read a thousand words of personal opinions and commentary.Frustrated at the lack of insight shown by his employer, Wells resigned and almost gave up entirely on his attempt to join the web. He was on the verge of unplugging the computer when Terry Irving heard about his departure from CNN and dropped him an email asking if he was interested in opening a new chat room for radio personality Don Imus. Wells agreed to do so on the condition that he would get a small spot on the MSNBC website to write his daily commentary feature. Irving loved the idea and six weeks later, Imus in The Morning on MSNBC took to the air on the same day that “The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly” by Charles Wells hit the MSNBC web pages. It lasted over eight years and Wells never missed a deadline.The highlight, if one cares to look at it that way, of his career at MSNBC happened on that fateful morning of September 11, 2001. Wells was in charge of the morning Imus chat and assisting another host working in the news room chats. Between the two, there were over 150 visitors in the two chat rooms when the first aircraft hit the World Trade Center. His steady and cool handling of site visitors as they flooded in for the latest information, established his reputation as being one of the internet’s top hosts controllers after he juggled a staggering 2400 chatters solo for almost an hour until help could arrive. He then stayed on duty for a solid twelve hours straight.Even with such public exposure under his belt, Wells did not feel quite ready for prime book publishing especially since he was switching from factual reporting to fiction mystery as his genre of choice. After MSNBC ended the chat room days and let Wells and a dozen others go, he stayed below the radar for several years until 2009 when his first fiction novel hit the markets under the name “Sand Hill Estates the Murders.” That book, one of the first classes of digital only books offered online, trudged along quietly with modest sales but drew few raves or reviews outside the mystery community. In 2010 he took the characters and plots and reworked them, then expanded into today’s “Whispering Pines.” From one book grew a six and counting series of fast paced suspense thrillers geared for all age groups. Book seven has a tentative release date of January 2012.On several occasions during interviews, Wells was asked if he had plans yet to eventually wrap and end the series. “I haven’t told all the stories yet so no. At this time I’ve still got one story in progress and two more in mind waiting.”

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