| The Mailman by
  Andrew Welsh-Huggins Mysterious
  Press, 2025 The Mailman,
  by Andrew Welsh-Huggins—best known as the author of the seven books in the Andy
  Hayes, P.I. series—is a peddle-to-the-metal thriller with a nod to Jack Reacher
  but with a wholly original character in freelance deliveryman, Mercury Carter.
  While delivering a package to attorney Rachel Stanfield, Merc finds Rachel
  and her husband, Glenn, being questioned, tortured really, by four men
  looking for Stella Wolford, the complainant in a seemingly meaningless wrongful
  termination lawsuit against Rachel’s corporate client. Rachel hasn’t seen
  Stella since her deposition weeks earlier, and Rachel has no idea where
  Stella lives. But the men, led by the menacing Finn, are determined that
  Rachel can tell them where Stella is hiding. Merc reacts quickly—and very un-deliveryman-like—and
  incapacitates two of the men before Finn stands Merc down by threatening
  Rachel and Glenn. Finn, with his entourage, leaves Merc and Glenn behind and
  takes Rachel as a hostage. With Glenn in tow, and a hunch Finn is going after
  Glenn’s daughter at a Chicago boarding school, Merc goes after the kidnappers
  with a single verbalized goal: his night won’t be over until the package is
  delivered to Rachel. The Mailman is
  a multi-layered chase thriller—there are a bunch of moving parts that are
  handled marvelously by Welsh-Huggins—with a handful of surprises and a likable,
  if somewhat stiff, hero. Merc’s backstory, including his motivation to help
  people, is told in short and interesting snippets in the first half of the
  narrative. The action moves across the Midwest, from Indianapolis to Chicago and
  places in-between, without much importance of the where—instead it is
  the what and the why of the villains’ activities (and Merc’s
  reaction to them) that give the tale interest. The Mailman is a nail-biting
  escapist thriller with twists and whirls and everything else the genre
  promises. It’s damn fun, too.  | 
| Check out The Mailman  on Amazon—click here for the Kindle edition and here for the hardcover. | 
 

 
 
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