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Kathy L Murphy's Big Book Love

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76 contributions to Kathy L Murphy's Big Book Love
The Night Shift in Hell
The Night Driver A Diego De LaCruz Thriller Diego kept the Checker steady as he rolled through the South Bronx, his hands firm on the wheel, eyes shifting from mirror to windshield and back. The block looked like a place that had been torn apart and never put back together. Tall brick tenements rose on both sides of the street, their black iron fire escapes stacked one above another like cages bolted to the walls. Rubble lay in dirty heaps along the curbs. Stripped vans and wrecked cars sat abandoned in the gutter. Trash and broken boards cluttered the sidewalks; at this hour of the night, the street felt dead and grim. This part of the South Bronx was called Fort Apache by the cops, and from behind the wheel, Diego understood why. It didn't feel like an ordinary neighborhood. It felt like a war-torn stretch of city left to decay in plain sight. He drove slow, not because he wanted to, but because the street forced it. A delivery truck sat crooked near the curb. A battered sedan looked half-picked apart. Farther down, figures moved in doorways and along the sidewalk, men of the night with nothing better to do than watch for weakness, drift toward trouble, or look for an easy mark. Somewhere in the distance, a siren rose and fell, then faded under the rattle of loose metal and the low hum of the cab. Diego smelled wet brick, old smoke, engine heat, and the stale rot of garbage through the cracked vent window. He had driven bad streets in Manhattan, but this was something else. The Lower East Side was rough. This felt like abandonment with teeth. He kept moving through the ruins with the patience the job had taught him. A cab driver who let his nerves get the better of him didn't last long in New York. He checked every doorway, every roofline, every narrow gap between parked vehicles. Trouble didn't always come rushing at you; sometimes it waited for you to slow down. Diego knew that. In a place like this, a man drove with more than caution. He drove with instinct, with discipline, with the quiet knowledge that one wrong stop on the wrong block could turn a fare into a fight and a fight into a body on the pavement.
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The Night Shift in Hell
Rain, Steel, and Shadows
The Night Diver A Diego De LaCruz Thriller Night in New York did not fall gently in 1979. It came down hard over brick walls, rusted fire escapes, and rain-slicked streets that seemed to hold every secret the city wanted buried. In The Night Driver, Diego De LaCruz moves through that darkness behind the wheel of a yellow Checker cab, hunting for answers in a city where danger waits at every curb. Under the sodium glow of tenement windows and streetlamps, he is not alone. Sakura stands beside him, silent and lethal, as the two of them face a world of ambushes, betrayal, and violence that never announces itself until it is too late. This is not the polished New York of postcards and nostalgia. This is the old city. Gritty. Damaged. Alive. The Night Driver is a hard-edged thriller about loyalty, survival, and war in the shadows, where every wet street can turn into a battlefield, and every ride can become the last.
Rain, Steel, and Shadows
0 likes • 1d
@Lynette Simmons Thank you
Finding The Merry Widow Inside Me
For the first few years after Tommy died, I couldn't imagine being anything other than his widow; always married to him in my heart. His wife. Even though he wasn't here anymore, I was still playing the role. Still being Mrs. Tommy Simmons. Still making his favorite butterbeans and cornbread and any kind of fried meat, even though there was nobody there to eat it. Still sleeping on my side of the bed, leaving his side untouched, like he might come back and need the space. I was an extension of him. A footnote. The plus-one who'd lost her plus. And here's the thing nobody tells you about being a widow in your sixties: you're supposed to be okay with that. You're supposed to wear your grief like a badge of honor, prove your love by how thoroughly you disappear into the absence of your husband. Well, I tried that. I really did. And it nearly killed me. The isolation was crushing. The loneliness was like a physical weight on my chest. I was a receptionist at a Regional Hospital and a Lay Chaplain. I saw people every day. My granddaughter Miranda and her wonderful son, my six-year-old great-grandson, Eric, lived with me. They were such joy to my aching heart. But, not the same as having my own life.
Finding The Merry Widow Inside Me
1 like • 2d
What a powerful evolution, Lynette. Choosing to have your 'own life' isn't just an act of healing; it’s an act of courage. I’m so glad to see your memoir doing well; you’re giving a voice to so many people who feel invisible in their grief. Keep shining!"
Mott Street, 1979
Mott Street didn’t welcome you; it tolerated you. Between E. Houston and Prince Street, the brick wall of St. Patrick’s Old Cathedral acted as a silent, jagged boundary, turning the sidewalk into a narrow gauntlet where the sun died early. Diego moved along that wall like a shadow within a shadow, his weight shifted forward, his boots meeting the cracked pavement in a silent, rolling gait that left no trail of sound. His Checker cab sat idling near the curb, its engine a low, mechanical growl that masked the city’s smaller secrets. The air tasted of wet soot and cheap exhaust, and the long shadows stretched toward him like fingers. In this light, every parked car was a potential blind spot, and every doorway was a tactical question. He didn’t look for trouble, but he walked with his center low and his eyes on the "hinges" of the street, the subtle shifts in the shadows that told him a predator was waiting for the light to change.
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Mott Street, 1979
1-10 of 76
M. Damien Suriel
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@m-damien-suriel-8351
M. Damien Suriel is a retired New Yorker, former night cab driver, and martial artist writing his debut novel The Night Driver, a 1979 NYC Thriller

Active 2h ago
Joined Jan 7, 2026
Malaga, Spain
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