Bestselling author Jonas Saul penned the Sarah Roberts series and has over forty thrillers under his belt. He joined with Gandolfo Helin & Fountain Literary and Dramatic Rights Management after selling over two million books. Throughout the last decade, Jonas has frequently outperformed Stephen King and Dean Koontz on Amazon. He’s also a freelance editor who is often invited to appear at international writing conferences as a guest lecturer, teacher, or workshop presenter.
In the first book of the Sarah Roberts series, Visions of the Dark, Sarah is dealing with a one-of-a-kind dilemma. She has regular blackouts, but the one thing that sets them apart is that she wakes up to messages written by her own hand. These notes are foretellings: visions of the dark. Events in the future that are likely to be disastrous but that Sarah can possibly prevent, because she is an automatic writer. She responds to one of her texts at the start of the book: At 10:18 a.m., sit under the Elizabeth St. Bridge. Bring your hammer with you.
Her next mission will be to prevent a kidnapping. It’s not the first time she’s done it. The kidnappers are aware of her. There are those who are killed. Sarah is said to have been present at the crime site. The cops discover her notepad, which is filled with predictions about accidents and crimes. They’re looking for answers. And all of this takes place while the eighteen-year-old Sarah suffers from trichotillomania, or the urge to pull out one’s hair. The plot includes various twists and turns before culminating in a tremendous finale and a lead-in to part two of this series, The Warning.