The Hidden Treasure Files. Martin Herman

The Hidden Treasure Files - Martin Herman


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      The Hidden Treasure Files

      by Martin Herman

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      The Hidden Treasure Files

      …A WILL JAMES MYSTERY

      Copyright ©2016 Martin Herman

      ISBN-13: 9781945211041

      ALSO BY MARTIN HERMAN

      The Jefferson Files

      The Jefferson Files -- the expanded edition

      Published in eBook format by:

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      521 Simsbury Road, Bloomfield, CT 06002

      Converted by http://www.eBookIt.com

      ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. No part of this book publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means – electronic, mechanical, photo-copy, recording, or any other – except brief quotation in reviews, without the prior permission of the author or publisher.

      This book is historic fiction – This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

      Acknowledgements

      When you spend much of your life writing fiction for your own amusement – as I have – it is a true eye-opener when one day you find that others are interested in reading what you have written. My first published novel resulted in such an interesting series of events for me. First, the lovely Lora Chan, single-handedly sold about 100 copies of my first novel, The Jefferson Files to virtually every person she came across. Her conversation starter went from, “Do you read mysteries?” to “Would you like me to ask him to autograph it for you?” before most of those nice people even knew it, they had actually purchased a book.

      Then there was the book launch party that my daughter, Aimee, threw for me in Brooklyn. Family and friends – many of the friends who attended that evening were my daughter’s – and all who attended were supportive. These wonderful people not only came and listened to what I had to say, but also purchased copies of my novel. Some may even have read it!

      Then came the exposure on Amazon.com… it was like being the subject of a worldwide party line.

      I am so appreciative of professionals like Carol Lennig, Librarian, Adult Services, Prosser Public Library, Bloomfield, Connecticut, who was the first public librarian to purchase my novel for her library; she placed The Jefferson Files into both Bloomfield, Connecticut Library branches. This is my home town library which made this particular placement so special for me.

      Subsequently I was permitted to speak and sign copies of my book as part of a new author’s night at the North Haven, Barnes & Noble store. Thank you, Bianca Bancroft, Community Business Development Manager…

      Closely followed by a radio interview on WESU – Middletown, Connecticut – thank you, Donovan Longmore and Yvonne Davis…

      And that warm and supportive reception during the Bloomfield Book Fair, where I was permitted to read passages from my novel and sign copies; thank you Marie Robinson…

      At the Bloomfield Book Fair I met the hard working and very effective June Hyjek. June was the President of the Connecticut chapter of APSS, a writer’s group, at the time. As an APSS member I had numerous opportunities to present my novel to many new audiences. It was June Hyjek who tenaciously fought the politicians in Hartford and didn’t stop until the Governor declared September 1st, 2015 as Connecticut Author’s Day, proving once again that the right man for a job is more often than not, a woman!

      All of that happened just around the time I turned 75. Imagine starting a new chapter in life at 75?

      What a treat this all has been.

      Fortunately, my first novel, almost 10 years in the making, enjoyed surprisingly steady sales; leading to the writing of this second novel – this time in only 5 months; I have so enjoyed this newest chapter in my life and now that I am hooked, I hope to continue writing for as many more days as I may still have on this earth.

      Hopefully, there will be readers who will continue to want to read what I write.

      To Alan Pepper…

      Alan was one of the principal continuity editors for this book – not because he decided to be a book editor in his latest incarnation but because he is an avid reader and is and has been a very special friend of mine. His thorough and precise notes and follow up questions along with his intelligent suggestions helped make this a far better “read” than the 13th re-write I first shared with him.

      Alan is known throughout the music world and a fair share of New York’s general population as one of the two founders of New York’s legendary The Bottom Line, in the Greenwich Village neighborhood of New York City. For almost 30 years The Bottom Line was “the” go to venue for new and established performers – the place many first discovered Bruce Springsteen and K D Lang… where Prince appeared as did Dolly Parton and Billie Joel as well as Aaron Copeland. Where Richard Price read from the galleys of his book, Clockers… where Lou Reed recorded the album Live: Take No Prisoners, and where Harry Chapin held his 2000th concert.

      It was where I learned to appreciate Handel’s Messiah through the Bottom Line’s creative version, the Downtown Messiah. Where I watched, with more than a few mixed emotions, one of Soupy Sales’s last performances… saw Ringo Starr light up the stage during a rare late night surprise appearance; where I first discovered how great a guitarist Janis Ian was; and where I rediscovered the Jefferson Airplane and David Johansen, (aka Buster Poindexter).

      If you enjoy this mystery– as I hope you will – you can thank Alan.

      The Hidden Treasure Files by Martin Herman

      This is the second in the current series of Will James mystery novels, this time, the antiestablishment private investigator and his crew are asked to help unravel a mystery that begins in a Brooklyn antique store and ends in the most unlikely of locations.

      Every Sunday morning, precisely at 10:30 sharp, there is an auction held in a sparsely furnished back room of Better Times Remembered, a small neighborhood antique store in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn. Albert Froog, the owner of the store and self declared auctioneer, personally chooses the items for each week’s auction. Generally these items are fairly ordinary but become more interesting because of the back story he is able to weave around them. At times there is even a speck of truth in the story he tells.

      At this particular Sunday morning auction, one of the items he offers up is a prohibition era permit in a battered old wooden frame authorizing the manufacture of alcohol. It was one of many items he acquired in an estate purchase. On his inventory sheet he has assigned a value of 50 cents to one dollar for this item because so many similar permits were issued during prohibition and the frame is of little or no value.

      Hoping he will wind up with something between 50 cents and a dollar he starts the bidding at $2.00.

      To his surprise and amazement two separate people quickly bid the price up to $100,000.

      “Who would pay $100,000 for this piece of junk?” Froog asks himself. “What do they know that I don’t?”

      When the head of the New York Mafia family also shows interest in the item Froog becomes doubly convinced that he really has a hidden treasure on his hands.

      If


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