Eleven Stolen Horses Talk and Signing with Robin Somers at Orinda Books!
“Robin Somers knows the gritty corners of the Sierra Nevada, what it means to cover a crime beat, and most of all how to tell a moody, multi-layered story in mesmerizing style. Eleven Stolen Horses is a knockout.”
—Elizabeth McKenzie, author of Dog of the North
Join Robin Somers, author of Eleven Stolen Horses for an author talk and signing on November 2nd, 2024 at Orinda Books! Somers will be featured in a showcase of authors at the bookstore that night!
EVENT INFORMATION
NOVEMBER 2nd 2024, 1-3PM
Orinda Books
276 Village Square
Orinda, CA 94563
For more information, please visit Orinda Books event page: https://www.orindabooks.com/events
Order your copy of Eleven Stolen Horses here!
About Eleven Stolen Horses:
Eleanor Wooley is determined to start her life over in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada. But when her new best friend suddenly disappears, Eleanor abandons her job as a crime reporter for The Gold Strike
Tribune and sets off in desperate pursuit.
Spurred by gut instinct, Eleanor soon leaves California and scours Northeastern Nevada during one of the hottest, driest summers on record. Obscure signs appear—an intruder’s dire warning, a casino’s
mysterious graffiti, a random sighting of a killer on the road.
In her search to find Rette, Eleanor discovers the dark world of today’s inhumane treatment of wild horses, and when the secrets of her trusted best friend’s past begin to surface, Eleanor finds herself in grave danger. With the backdrop of the American West’s high desert wilderness and its towering, rugged mountains and vast open range, Eleanor is forced to decide if continuing her search for Rette is worth losing her own life.
About Robin Somers:
Ex-crime reporter Robin Somers spent her middle years in Tuolumne County in the Sierra Nevada, where she wrote for the daily newspaper and kept a horse. Today, she lives in Santa Cruz, California, with her new/old husband and their Havanese, Buster. She continues to teach an occasional class at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and returns frequently to the Sierra Nevada. She is a passionate advocate for wild horses. A founding member of the Coastal Cruisers chapter of Sisters in Crime, she is the author of Beet Fields, a murder mystery.