Author Steven Clark Bradley has been to or lived in 34 countries, including Pakistan, Iraqand Turkey. He has a master’s degree in liberal studies from IndianaUniversity. He speaks French and Turkish. He has been an assistant to aprosecutor, a university instructor and a freelance journalist.
Steven Clark Bradley has four Published Thrillers:
Unknownto Wallace Findings, a one-night stand results in twins. The mother ismurdered soon after their birth to cover a hideous crime, which sendsFindings on an eighteen yearhunt for her murderer. One twin is adopted and welcomed into awonderful life of plenty and privilege. The other is rejected and leftan orphan, in a world without identity or care, facing brutal treatmentand sexual abuse. This twin seeks out Findings and his sibling and allthose who had abandoned him to carry out a plot of revenge. In the end,Findings discovers his role in a baby for sale scheme in which he andhis unknown children were victims.
current issues in his novel, "Patriot Act" (Cambridge Books, $18).
Americafaces nuclear attack by the Islamic Republic of Iran and the bestperson to retaliate is a Special Ops killer currently serving time fora murder he did not commit.
Bradley lives in Rowland Heights and has worked around theglobe. He is fluent in French and Turkish and is currently a teacherand a writer.
<p><strong><em>A tragic warrior lost in two worlds... Which one will he choose?</em></strong></p><p>The war in Iraq ended for Freddie when an IED explosion left his mind and body shattered. Once a skilled gamer as well as a capable soldier, he's now a broken warrior, emerging from a medically induced coma to discover he's inhabiting two separate realities.</p><p>The first is his waking world of pain, family trials, and remorse—and slow rehabilitation through the tender care of Becky, his physical therapist. The second is a dark fantasy realm of quests, demons, and magic, which Freddie enters when he sleeps. The lines soon blur for Freddie, not just caught between two worlds, but lost within himself.</p><p>Is he Lieutenant Freddie Williams, a leader of men, a proud officer in the US Army who has suffered such egregious injury and loss? Or is he Frederick, Prince of Stormwind, who must make sense of his horrific visions in order to save his embattled kingdom from the monstrous Horde, his only solace the beautiful gardener, Rebecca, whose gentle words calm the storms in his soul.</p><p>In the conscious world, the severely wounded vet faces a strangely similar and equally perilous mission to that of the prince—a journey along a dark road, haunted by demons of guilt and memory. Can he let patient, loving Becky into his damaged and shuttered heart? It may be his only way back from Hell.</p>
March 12, 2008: Attention, all you conspiracy theorists and doomsday dreamers, all you with visions of the apocalypse and feel the end of the world is at hand. Relax. According to Steven Clark Bradley, it?s much worse than you think. In his novel, Nimrod Rising!, Bradley introduces us to Nimrod, the son of Cush, the son of Noah, who was born around 4,000 BC. Nimrod was born the savior of Lucifer and his evil subjects, and led and ill-fated rebellion against Elyon (God), in an effort to secure our world for the Fallen One. Through death and rebirth, Nimrod reappears in various human incarnations 666 times throughout history. In Bradley?s story, the Antichrist is now in the world, and a sinister demon possesses the US Vice-president Manassa Dormain, whose son was conceived under mysterious and unexplainable circumstances. One thing is for certain, the spirit of Nimrod has risen again in the boy, and the apocalyptic fight between the forces of heaven and hell is ready to begin anew. The book continues with father helping son in preparation to play his role in the fight for world power, for better or worse. <br /><br />The battle lines are drawn and the readers is left guessing who is on which side until the very end. Full of complex machinations and apocalyptic visions of a possible future, Nimrod Rising! is a thought provoking work of epic proportions. Steven Bradley has shown us a different, and quite frankly, a frightening way to look at world events. His characters show a depth and complexity that bring them to life in our world, and show an eerie similarity to many of today?s world leaders. Reading the newspaper will never be the same again -Reviewed by Ronald W. Adams, author 'Lake Effect', 'Key Lime Squeeze'