Books by Eric Douglas

Thriller fiction and Non-fiction

  • Home
  • Mike Scott Thrillers
    • Held Hostage: Search for the Juncal
    • Water Crisis: Day Zero
    • Turks and Chaos: Hostile Waters
    • The 3rd Key: Sharks in the Water
    • Oil and Water: Crash in Curacao
    • Return to Cayman: Paradise Held Hostage
    • Heart of the Maya: Murder for the Gods
    • Wreck of the Huron: Cuban Secrets
    • Guardians’ Keep: Mystery below the Adriatic
    • Flooding Hollywood: Fanatics at the Dam
    • Cayman Cowboys: Reefs Under Pressure
  • Withrow Key
    • Lyin’ Fish
    • Tales from Withrow Key
  • Agent AJ West
  • About the Author
    • Publicity and Interviews
  • Nonfiction
    • For Cheap Lobster
    • Heart Survivor: Recovery After Heart Surgery
    • Oral History
      • Batter Up!
      • Memories of the Valley
      • WV Voices of War / Common Valor
      • Capturing Memories: How to Record Oral Histories
    • Dive-abled: The Leo Morales Story
    • Keep on, Keepin’ On: A Breast Cancer Story
    • WV Voices of War / Common Valor
    • Russia: The New Age
    • Scuba Diving Safety
  • Free Short Fiction
  • Other Fiction
    • Sea Turtle Rescue and Other Stories
    • River Town
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A toast to Clive Cussler – RIP

February 26, 2020 By Eric Douglas

Many scuba divers will tell you they got inspired to learn to dive watching Sea Hunt or by Jacques Cousteau and his undersea world television show.  

I fall into the latter category along with growing up reading National Geographic magazine and seeing what was below the waves in full color. 

Nearly every diver I know, though (at least the ones who like to read) will also say they’ve spent hours upon hours reading the dozens of books by Clive Cussler. I can’t say which book I read first, but after I got started I quickly tore through the whole Dirk Pitt series.  

I was always amused when he would insert himself as an amusing character in his own books.

Clive Cussler has died, according to a statement from his family. While a natural part of life, it is still sad. On top of the entertainment he provided, Cussler used part of the proceeds from his books to create a real NUMA (the fictional government agency where Pitt worked) and he funded and organized numerous expeditions and located dozens of shipwrecks.  

As a diver, a reader and as an author, this hits close to home. He definitely inspired my own writing and many of the stories I’ve written since my first book. 

Fair winds and following seas, Clive. 

Filed Under: Books, Diving

Scary Ghost Stories in Flash Fiction for 2019

December 21, 2019 By Eric Douglas

Every year, for the winter solstice, Loren Eaton from I Saw Lightning Fall organizes writers to contribute flash fiction stories with a Christmas/Solstice theme – these are all in the category of “scary ghost stories” from Christmas.

The only rule is, these stories are 100 words, no more, no less. Writing flash fiction is an interesting challenge. As a friend said one time, what you leave out is just as important as what you leave in.

Below are my contributions to the fun this year. Below that are links to previous years.

I also highly recommend you visit the Advent Ghosts 2019 page to read the contributions of the many other writers. Some will be funny; some will be scary. You may not like all of them, but there will be one or two that give you chills.

Keep checking back to the main page throughout the day as more contributions will come in.

Read on!

Return Visit

He asked his priest to come.

He spoke to a friend who had been to the South Pacific. That man put him in contact with a witch doctor.

A third friend knew a pagan priest who lived in the mountains to the north.

All three visitors blessed his home in their own ways. They shouted incantations, splashed holy water and burned sage.

He didn’t really believe in any of it. He had changed his ways since last year, giving to the poor and being kind.

But Scrooge wanted to make sure he didn’t get any more visitors like last year.

Keep the Fire Burning

The weather outside was definitely frightful.

But keeping the fire going was all about survival. There was no delight in it at all.

Patrick had a good supply of wood laid in. He just had to stay awake all night and keep adding on fresh logs. He wouldn’t let it go out.

He couldn’t.

This was about life and death. If the fire died, so would he. What was outside would come in.

Terror drove him through the night.

If he kept the fire burning, big and bright, the fat man on the sleigh wouldn’t be able to get inside.  

Christmas and Advent Flash Fiction from Previous Years

  • Roasting over an open fire and Costume?
  • Birth of a god and Data Breach
  • I saw mommy kissing… and What if? 
  • A glass of wine and Parasite
  • The End of Darkness and Naughty List
  • A little bit of Grandma

Here are a couple other Christmas stories. They aren’t flash fiction, but fit the theme.

  • Pearl Harbor Christmas
  • Santa is from Outerspace

Filed Under: Free Fiction

Thanksgiving Audiobook Giveaway!

November 21, 2019 By Eric Douglas

This promotion has ended.

Thanksgiving road trips can be stressful. And there are times when you just want a little escape. I will randomly pick 5 people who complete the survey below to receive a free code to download one of my audiobooks. A sixth lucky winner will receive codes for all four!

Just three simple questions and enter your email to be notified if you win. Simple as that. No catch.

This survey ends November 25, so get your entry in now. I will draw the names on the 26th.

Share it with friends and give them the opportunity to join in!

[qsm quiz=1]

Filed Under: Books

Author Eric Douglas Releases New FBI Thriller Novel

November 5, 2019 By Eric Douglas

The latest novel from author Eric Douglas involves a mysterious murder cult brought to the United States to sow discord and terror.

Real Thugs: A Cult of Murder — Small groups of travelers have disappeared all over the mid-Atlantic without a trace. When bodies turn up with what appear to be ritual markings, FBI Agent AJ West is on the hunt for what might be a serial killer. Or something even more sinister. It’s a race against time to make sure no one else goes missing and stop the killer, or killers, before there is a nationwide panic.

Douglas explained that he became interested in this story while reading an out-of-print book by Mark Twain. Twain took an around-the-world speaking tour and told the story of the Thuggee, a group of thieves who traveled India killing and stealing. The group was wiped out by the British during the period of colonial rule.

“They killed their victims by strangulation using scarves they tied around their waists,” Douglas said.

From there, Douglas read “Confessions of a Thug” by Captain Philip Meadows Taylor. That book purports to be an interview with a Thuggee leader in prison. The book was written in the mid-1800s.

At that point, Douglas knew he wanted to use the Thuggee in a new book. He just needed a protagonist. Enter FBI Special Agent AJ West.

“I created AJ for my novel Water Crisis: Day Zero last year. That was the most recent of the Mike Scott thriller series. I enjoyed her character so much, I decided to spin her off into her own book,” Douglas said.

Douglas has been writing fiction since his first novel, Cayman Cowboys, was published in 2004. This is his 19th book, including a combination of fiction and nonfiction.

Real Thugs: A Cult of Murder is available on Amazon Kindle and in softcover wherever books are sold. For more information on Real Thugs, or any of Douglas’ other books, visit his website at BooksByEric.com.

Filed Under: Adventure, Books, New Releases

Real Thugs — Chapter Seven

September 25, 2019 By Eric Douglas

Real Thugs: A Cult of Murder is coming soon. Visit the book page for more information.

AJ donned her FBI windbreaker and hung her ID from a lanyard around her neck before approaching the scene. Dwayne knew the drill and followed right behind her. While he knew she could take out anyone there, his jaw was still sore from their morning workout, he also realized sometimes having a male presence as backup helped with the locals. They had discussed it many times. Not that he would supersede her authority but having him standing there ready to follow her orders smoothed the way for the others.

As soon as the local officers saw AJ and Dwayne approach, they turned to look at the chief of police who stood facing the scene with his back to them. When he realized that his men were looking at him, he turned to see what had their attention.

“Boy, am I glad to see you two,” the man said without any preamble.

AJ smiled. That was the other option for this discussion. Sometimes, the locals wanted nothing to do with a scene like this and were only too happy to turn it over to someone else.

“We got here as quickly as we could, sir. I’m Special Agent AJ West and this Special Agent Dwayne Charles.”

“I’m Phil Newsome, the sheriff in Prince William County. The park police and rangers called me in. We work with them closely when there is an accident in the park. They don’t have the resources to deal with this sort of thing. But I took one look at this mess and knew it was over my head, too.”

“Why don’t you tell me what you’ve found. Since this is on national park land and considering how close we are to the Marine base at Quantico, this is definitely federal jurisdiction.”

“I didn’t know if I should call NCIS or you guys,” Newsome said.

“I’ll alert NCIS if the situation warrants.” AJ preferred to keep her comments in situations like this to the basics. It was her basic interrogation technique, not giving away too much information and letting others fill in the gaps.

“That sounds good. So, here’s what we’re looking at.”

Newsome turned and faced the crime scene. Two men in Tyvek suits were uncovering a hole in the ground and AJ could see at least three bodies.

“A hiker found this. At least part of it. An arm was sticking out of the ground where an animal had gotten to it.”

Eight officers stood around the scene. They were 50 yards away from the road, down an embankment. AJ noted the soil seemed soft where runoff had collected the leaves and sediment from the hills. She could just hear a small stream behind some tall shrubs.

The local police had strung police tape around a 30-foot square covering the shallow graves.

“Our report said there were two bodies here. But that looks like three to me.”

“We just uncovered the third one. When I called FBI headquarters, we only saw two. The third body was buried below the second one.

“All right. We’ll arrange to have all three bodies sent to our lab for autopsy and further identification. Can I rely on your people to continue what you’re doing until our crime scene people get here? Don’t move the bodies, but keep this area secure?”

“Sure, that’s no problem. I’ll have my people clear the area. We’ve set up a perimeter.”

“Have you found any evidence in the area?”

“No, nothing that jumps out at us. We’ve canvassed the area, but other than some trash left behind it looks like the area has been undisturbed for a while.”

“Were all three bodies discovered together?” AJ asked.

“No, the first body was a few feet away – over there.” He pointed at one open pit where the police had dug the body out of the ground. “That’s the one the animal dug up. When we got out here to examine it, we discovered the other grave. That’s when we identified the clothes as being from the missing couple in the missing persons report. We keep a close eye on those. But then found the third body underneath him. Those two bodies were wrapped in sheets, too. The first body, the one by itself, wasn’t cut or wrapped.”

“Anything else?” Dwayne asked. “Anything unusual?”

“You now, I’ve seen my fair share of bodies. Two of them, the pair in the same grave, look like they were cut up, but I’m guessing it was post-mortem.”

“How so?”

“Well, it’s just a guess, but the stomachs were sliced into and there are punctures in the rib cage. That isn’t how you would kill someone unless you were torturing them or some sort of ritualistic killing. Like I said, though, the other body we found separately was completely different.”

“All right, sir. Thank you. It sounds like you have done a thorough job. I appreciate your hard work, but our people will take over now,” AJ said.

An FBI crime scene van had just arrived, and two technicians were approaching the scene. Dwayne went over to brief the newcomers and AJ moved closer to the scene to look at the three bodies. Something just didn’t make sense.

Would the killer change their MO completely like that? Anything was possible. Maybe the killer did some research and decided to up his game? But he didn’t get any more creative than dumping the bodies that close together?

There wasn’t any point in speculating about this right now. She wanted IDs on the three bodies and then they would begin the investigation. Run down the usual leads, check to see what the people might have had in common. Determine where they might have crossed each other, or some other intersection that lead them to the killer.

AJ was a thorough investigator and she wouldn’t color her own findings by trying to create a narrative before she had more information. This scene just made her itch.

Dwayne approached with the crime scene technicians. “Any instructions?”

“No, just do it by the book. Ask the sheriff to have his people hang close. Let’s do a quick interview with them to see if they noticed anything. They’ll send us all of their initial notes, but you know everything doesn’t make it into the written reports.”

Dwayne started to walk away, but AJ had another thought.

“Hold on a second. I want to check this whole area out. I’ll make the call, but I want to get some more help on this one. It sure feels like we have two different crime scenes. There might be more right under our feet. We’ll get some more technicians to bring in ground penetrating radar to search the area and see if there are more bodies than just these.”

Searching the area took the rest of the afternoon and late into the evening. They brought in lights to allow them to continue working, but finally called off the search around midnight. They had to be thorough and explore every possibility but didn’t find anything else suspicious outside of the two graves.

The medical technicians removed the three bodies from the scene quickly, but AJ noted just how differently they had been treated prior to burial. Other than the cuts to the abdomen and chest wall, the bodies of the couple were surprisingly intact and undamaged.

The body of the lone victim showed signs of being beaten with severe trauma to his head. His clothes were crusted with what was likely dried blood. There was no wrapping of cutting or the body, either.

Filed Under: Books, Free Fiction, New Releases

The diving world tries to come to grips with devastating fire

September 4, 2019 By Eric Douglas

Just after the news of the tragic fire on the M/V Conception broke out, I had no idea what to say. And then I received an email from CNN asking if I could put it in words for people to understand. Here is what I came up with. 

Editors Note: Eric Douglas is a columnist for Scuba Diving Magazine and the co-author with Dan Orr of the book “Scuba Diving Safety.” He is also the author of the Mike Scott Thriller Series and nonfiction books like “Dive-Abled: The Leo Morales Story” and “Heart Survivor: Recovery from Heart Surgery.” The views expressed here are his own. Read more opinion on CNN.

(CNN) My heart sank on Monday when I saw the initial reports of the fire onboard the M/V Conception in California, but I immediately understood the circumstances the victims of the tragedy were facing. A group of divers was on board sleeping. No doubt they were dreaming of the dives they would do the next day, excited to explore the wonders of the Channel Islands.

I can imagine that because I’ve been there — never off the M/V Conception, but I have dived on one of her sister boats. I have made many dives in the cold, clear and thrilling waters in the area. I lived in Southern California early in my diving career and loved the experience of diving in the kelp forests and experiencing the Pacific Ocean.

Read the complete Essay on CNN’s website. 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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Real Thugs: A Cult of Murder — Small groups of travelers have disappeared all over the mid-Atlantic without a trace. When bodies turn up with what appear to be ritual markings, FBI Agent AJ West is on the hunt for what might be a serial killer. Or something even more sinister. It’s a race against […]

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