As identical twins Annie
and Amanda celebrate their fourteenth birthday, their father Harry is involved
in a fiery three-car crash that leaves all occupants dead.
Four years after the
accident, Amanda suddenly vanishes, and her boyfriend is found murdered. Getting
little assistance from the police, Amanda's mother seeks the help of William
Snow, a local man with a reputation for finding missing persons.
Snow begins an
investigation and soon uncovers an inexplicable link between Amanda's disappearance
and her father's deadly accident. As Snow digs further into this bizarre
connection, more people start to disappear. The case eventually leads him to an
uninhabited island, a madman known as The Driver, and the twisted truth behind
the death of Harry Crow.
Leith C MacArthur was born in Boston and grew up in the suburbs of Wayland, and Waltham, Massachusetts. As a young boy he became fascinated with the craft of writing after reading Edgar Allan Poe's, “The Raven”. Inspired, he sought out other depicters of darkness, despair, and redemption, allowing himself to be drawn into the fictitious worlds of mystery and adventure penned by the likes of Poe, Robert Louis Stevenson, Mickey Spillane, Dashiell Hammett, and Ross Macdonald. At the age of ten, Leith began writing short stories and poems that naturally tended toward the macabre. Two years later he wrote his first novelette, Gerry the Germ, the tale of a lowly life-form who finds his purpose within the grand scheme through tragedy and loss. Leith went on to write several novels (slated for future publication) before focusing on a number of related stories that eventually became The William Snow Series, consisting of Beneath The Bridge, The Stones of Mirabella, The Finding Man, The Death of Harry Crow, and The Man in the Moon, and The Weight. Leith lives in the western woods of Rhode Island with his gray cat, Gray.