Public Comment

Public Comment - Paperback

$21.58
Sale price  $21.58 Regular price 
Skip to product information
Public Comment

Public Comment - Paperback

by S. L. Jacobs
$21.58
Sale price  $21.58 Regular price 

Book Overview

Politics and Murder: Par for the Course

Public Comment holds up a satiric small-town mirror to governance as a really good place to hide murderous secrets. The book is a Killer Nashville Finalist and WINNER of the Best First Line contest sponsored by New York's WriteByNight.

Wendell Williams, a stunted and narcissistic groundskeeper at a local golf course, contemplates and commits a couple of murders. He has his reasons (tremendous reasons), and the golf course proves convenient for his purposes. To keep his secrets buried, he convinces half the townspeople that he is a visionary leader and that any development of the golf course property is not in the interests of the town. But Debra Wolfson, a plump, middle-aged family-law mediator and dedicated selectwoman with a fondness for oatmeal raisin cookies, finds herself on a collision course with the mendacious Wendell. While everyone is losing their heads over the turmoil that Wendell purposefully stokes, Debra is determined to keep hers and expose Wendell as a charlatan who has no business getting elected to public office.

ISBN9781959748366
Author S. L. Jacobs
PublisherFayetteville Mafia Press
GenreLiterature
FormatPaperback
PublishedMarch 2026
LanguageENG- English
Pages250
Weight1.0 lb
Target AudienceAdults
Print SizeStandard Print

1% fer Each of the Seven Seas

Every purchase sends 7% of our profits to The Ocean Cleanup. No fine print, no opt-in — just how we sail.

Whoever Ye Be, Welcome Aboard

Queer lit, music, art, philosophy, fiction — stories for every kind of soul. Come as ye are, matey.

About S. L. Jacobs

S. L. Jacobs is a product of Southern California. She graduated from UCLA in 1975 (BA, English literature, dean's list, service honors) and from Southwestern University School of Law in 1979 (JD, moot court honors, service honors). She moved to Woodbridge, Connecticut, in 1985 and was admitted to the Connecticut Bar in 1986.

You may also like