Three victims, three different states, and three apparently unrelated cases. But when Boulder, Colorado, math professor Jayne Smyers discovers each victim had been an expert in the mathematical field known as fractal geometry, she knows their deaths can't be coincidences.
That's where Pepper Keane comes in. Hired by Jayne after federal agents fail to link the three deaths, he's a former Marine JAG turned private eye, with an encyclopedic knowledge of rock and roll and a trace of existential angst.
From Hawaii to Harvard, Pepper begins a fast-paced journey in search of proof that all the deaths were indeed murders-and were almost certainly committed by the same person. As the evidence mounts, Pepper fears that his favorite math professor may be the next target. But he's failed to do the math completely. As he crosses America in search of clues, he's become the newest expert in the field of fractals. And that makes him more than qualified to die.
An intriguing brainteaser, a fast-paced mystery, and a novel that is at once funny, sexy, and suspenseful, 'The Fractal Murders' proves beyond a shadow of a doubt that there is a pattern to everything. Especially murder.