
Everyone dies.
Some are murdered by a serial killer, and some don’t stay dead.
Maggie’s heart stops after an accidental overdose of heroin, a middle-aged man hangs himself, and a widower is apparently knifed in an alley by his best friend. But Maggie carries knowledge from beyond death to help apathetic doctor, Bruce Lee, find and stop the killer who believes he is doing God’s work.
They’ve experienced near-death experiences and Dr. John Blakely, MD, PhD is making a killing promoting them, but is he the killer? And if he is, can anyone stop him? Or will Portland be like so many other towns, left with a string of unsolved crimes?
Bruce must learn to give a damn again. Maggie has to learn to love again, and Bo… Bo really has to stop “eating sushi off a dead man’s ass.”
The first book in the Mighty Men origin trinity, Post Mortal is a fast-paced theo-medical thriller that takes the reader to the edge of life, and beyond.
Available in hardcopy and Kindle
Thanks for signing up!
01
mortality
We All Die
“Life is a terminal diagnosis.” Every medical doctor has been taught this aphorism. As scientists, we have discovered or defined much of “what” is transpiring, in sickness and health, within the human body. The very biochemistry of death has been unveiled.
02
Near-death Experiences
Some Of Us Come Back
Researchers believe that one in twenty people will have a near death experience in their life. Fascinatingly, studies show remarkable commonalities linking these survivors together. What they see, feel, and bring back transcends geography, ancestry, or faith tradition.
03
faith
We Want To Believe
Most survivors report a profound sense of peace. Their very awareness evolves. Dr Campbell has stood at the bedside and witnessed this journey. His experiences with those who have died and came back were the inspiration for much of these stories.
04
doubt
We Question
Not everyone finds peace. Some come back empty and broken. What links these fallen few together has not been teased out by the research, but their story deserves to be told too, for all our good. Where science stops at “what,” faith must carry forward into “why.”

