Until I bought one, I'd never touched a gun, never stood in front of a full-length mirror pointing a gun at myself. Bang, bang. Mine was a Magnum .357 purchased in New Jersey, much more svelte than I'd imagined a gun could be.
Evan Ulmer is not in an unusual position. Many writers deal with rejection-anonymous polite letters from publishers, written by interns who clearly had not read more than a page of the manuscript. But Evan takes things into his own hands by kidnapping a famous editor, Robert Partnow, and locking him up in his basement equipped with a TV, treadmill, and Port-o-Johnnie behind a chain-link fence. At last an unpublished writer and a high-profile editor can have a leisurely conversation.
Positioned on either side of the fence, Evan shares his novel-in-progress with Robert and together they watch the media spin the abduction that reveals Robert's once secret life. Teetering between fiction and real life, between sanity and insanity, Plotting Revenge unfolds in startling directions causing Evan to ask: "Was abduction a difficult and gutsy endeavor or, instead, the predictable last resort of the desperately stupid?"
In this menacing debut novel, Daniel Hayes brings perhaps every rejected author's and dejected editor's darkest thoughts to light.