AUDIOBOOK

About
A serial killer's desire to protect children fuels a parallel drive to murder other sadistic men in this immersive
and literary psychological thriller.
BULLIED AS CHILD FOR BEING OVERWEIGHT and an orphan, the serial killer in I Disappeared Them hides
in plain sight. By day, he is an affable family man with a disarming smile, surrounded by his children and loving
wife. At night he punches the clock as a hard-working pizza man. After work, he roams Miami's nighttime streets
as the Periwinkle Killer, the sociopath passing judgment on the wicked according to a twisted moral code. He
believes himself to be a defender of women and children. The Everglades is filling up with the corpses of his
victims. He must be stopped, but there are no clues except the periwinkles he leaves at every crime scene.
I Disappeared Them is a brutal, boy meets girl love story that delves into the Periwinkle Killer's childhood to
confront the age-old question, is a serial killer designed or destined? Like Bret Easton Ellis's American Psycho
and Joyce Carol Oates's Zombie, Preston L. Allen's immersive narrative hauntingly occupies the peculiar
psychological landscape of a murderer.
and literary psychological thriller.
BULLIED AS CHILD FOR BEING OVERWEIGHT and an orphan, the serial killer in I Disappeared Them hides
in plain sight. By day, he is an affable family man with a disarming smile, surrounded by his children and loving
wife. At night he punches the clock as a hard-working pizza man. After work, he roams Miami's nighttime streets
as the Periwinkle Killer, the sociopath passing judgment on the wicked according to a twisted moral code. He
believes himself to be a defender of women and children. The Everglades is filling up with the corpses of his
victims. He must be stopped, but there are no clues except the periwinkles he leaves at every crime scene.
I Disappeared Them is a brutal, boy meets girl love story that delves into the Periwinkle Killer's childhood to
confront the age-old question, is a serial killer designed or destined? Like Bret Easton Ellis's American Psycho
and Joyce Carol Oates's Zombie, Preston L. Allen's immersive narrative hauntingly occupies the peculiar
psychological landscape of a murderer.