Crocodile Man Kills American Researcher in Central Africa.
And yes, he still enjoys doing what others tell him he shouldn\'t..
Phil and his wife, Denise, live on a quiet lake in Minnesota where he continues to write, play music with his band - Hans Blix and the Weapons Inspectors - and fight the good fight to preserve the natural world.
This desire to see what was over the next hill led to stints as a student of marine biology in Florida, a Peace Corps volunteer in Central Africa, a fishery biologist in Alaska, a grad student in Vermont, a game park director for the World Wildlife Fund in the African rain forest, a ghost writer for Minnesota Public Radio, and more recently, a part-time bluegrass musician and full-time expert on aquatic invasive species (AIS) in Minnesota.
At the age of three months, Phil flew to Japan (with some assistance from his mother), and that trip, according to his father, is when Phil caught the travel bug.
Phil\'s writing, whether in a novel, a song, a poem, a children\'s book, an article, an opinion piece, or even a professional work product, includes varying degrees of his sense of humor, which he thinks is as important to his survival as coffee spiked with Irish Cream, John Prine songs, a good boat, and his vintage Martin D-28 Martin guitar.
About author(s): Phil is a writer, musician, and radical environmentalist - the three things his pragmatic high school guidance counselor specifically told him not to pursue.
What he discovers is a scheme so twisted, he needs Molly\'s help to solve it.
In a faraway place that resembles an insane asylum run by the patients, Kael searches for the truth and to maybe find a little redemption.
He leaves his live-aboard boat and unemployment behind to journey to the Central African Republic to find out what really happened to his friend.
The dead researcher had once been a friend of his, and soon after reading of Molly\'s unusual death at the hands of a Central African sorcerer, Kael is haunted by vivid visions of her reaching out for his help.
Kael Husker stumbles over this National Enquirer-like headline in a week-old edition of his local Southeast Alaskan newspaper.
Crocodile Man Kills American Researcher in Central Africa