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  • No Hill to Die On (The Peter Brandt Mysteries Book 4)

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No Hill to Die On (The Peter Brandt Mysteries Book 4) Kindle Edition

4.7 out of 5 stars (13)

Former war correspondent Peter Brandt’s childhood innocence died the day his older brother, Keith, died in Vietnam. Now, a quarter of a century later, Keith’s former fiancée, Rhonda White, comes back into Peter’s life with an incredible claim—Keith may still be alive.

Twenty-four hours later, police find Rhonda’s body floating in San Diego Bay. Is it murder or suicide?

Rhonda’s death and her claim about Peter’s brother set him on an investigation ranging from the beaches and foothills of Southern California to the mountains of Costa Rica. The deeper he digs, the more mysteries he finds: Marines who fought alongside Keith don’t remember how he died; a shady technology exporter bearing a doppelgänger resemblance to T.D., Keith’s best friend who also died in the same battle; a Navy investigator who covered up his probe of a major wartime black-market operation; and a Costa Rican cop who may be more than he seems.

And then there are the big questions Peter isn’t sure he wants answered. Is Keith still alive? Did he desert the Marines and become part of the Vietnam underworld? And if he is still living, who did Peter’s family bury twenty-five years earlier?

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Exquisite tension and well-developed twists ... No Hill to Die On represents riveting reading at its best." (Midwest Book Review)

"This is a fast-paced thriller with a fascinating mystery at its core ... A thriller is meant to entertain as well as excite, and the author certainly achieves both here." (Reedsy Discovery)

"I got into this mystery novel from the first page. Hill's writing is crisp and direct ... a must-read for any fan of action/adventure combined with romance and wry wit." (Reader's Favorite)

"Hill's Vietnam War-based mystery -- the fourth in his Peter Brandt series -- engages readers from the first sentence, demonstrating the author's appreciation for military operations while offering up intrigue, suspense, and heady moments of dangerous corruption. The story's action -- coupled with high stakes and last minute reveals -- propels the plot, though Hill interjects plenty of weighty, character-driven episodes as well." (BookLife Prize)

"No Hill To Die On is one of the year's best thrillers" (BestThrillers Book Awards)

Awarded First Place for Mysteries by the BookFest Awards

About the Author

Martin Roy Hill is the author of the Linus Schag, NCIS, thrillers, the Peter Brandt thrillers, DUTY: Suspense and Mystery Stories from the Cold War and Beyond, Polar Melt: A Novel, and EDEN: A Sci-Fi Novella. His latest Linus Schag thriller, The Butcher's Bill, received the Best Mystery/Suspense Novel of 2017 from the Best Independent Book Awards, the Clue Award for Best Suspense Thriller, the Silver Medal for Thrillers from the Readers Favorite Book Awards, and the award for Adult Fiction from the California Author Project. His latest Peter Brandt mystery, The Fourth Rising, was named Best Mystery of 2020 by the Best Independent Books Awards, 2020 Best Crime Thriller by the American Fiction Awards, and the 2020 Clue Award for Best Suspense Thriller by the Chanticleer International Book Awards. His WWII thriller, Codename Parsifal, was named Best Military Thriller of 2024 by BestThrillers.com.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0DRTMTQMZ
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ 32-32 North
  • Accessibility ‏ : ‎ Learn more
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ May 1, 2025
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 4.0 MB
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 294 pages
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 979-8233843822
  • Page Flip ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Book 4 of 4 ‏ : ‎ The Peter Brandt Mysteries
  • Best Sellers Rank: #2,611,852 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.7 out of 5 stars (13)

About the author

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Martin Roy Hill
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Martin Roy Hill has led an eclectic life. Soldier, sailor, journalist . . . well, not a spy, but he has written about them.

Martin joined the U.S. Coast Guard Reserve when he was 19, the same year he sold his first published piece to Reader's Digest. He spent a total of 13 years as a Coastguardsman, in two tours, involved in small boat search and rescue, emergency medical response, port security, and maritime law enforcement.

In between those tours, he served in a counter-insurgency unit in the U.S. Navy Reserve. After a final stint of Coast Guard active duty following the 9/11 attacks, Martin was offered a commission as a medical service corps officer in a component of the California National Guard, where he trained combat medics for Iraq and Afghanistan. Later, Martin converted to the military police, retiring in 2016 as a major and executive officer of an MP unit.

Martin also served as a wilderness medic and operations sergeant with the San Diego County Sheriff's Department Wilderness Search and Rescue Detail, where he was cross trained as a tactical (SWAT) medic. Martin also spent several years as a medic and security specialist with a federal Disaster Medical Assistance Team.

Martin received a bachelor's degree in journalism from CSU Dominguez Hills, and spent more than 20 years as a writer and editor for newspapers and magazines. His investigative reporting earned him numerous journalism honors, including two William Allen White Awards. His stories were included in three of the Investigative Reporters and Editors' annual compilations of the best investigative reporting. He also worked as a freelance correspondent for LIFE and Newsweek.

After serving on active duty following the 9/11 attacks, Martin switched careers, becoming a U.S. Navy analyst in combat casualty care, a position he held for 16 years.

Between his military, public safety, and journalism careers, Martin experienced many adventures. In the Coast Guard, he participated in dozens of rescues, chased Russian spy ships and smugglers, protected dignitaries, and once was nearly lost at sea in a storm. In the Navy, he was assigned to liaison with a USCG patrol boat during war games, and ended up participating in what at the time was the largest drug bust in U.S. history.

He's been known to jump out of a perfectly good airplane, and once followed a migrant trail from the U.S. into Mexico (at that country's request) to locate the remains of a woman who died along the trail so the smuggler leading her group could be prosecuted for her death. As a journalist, he covered disasters, air crashes, wild fires, as well as national and international leaders.

Martin's freelance credits include Reader's Digest, LIFE, Newsweek, Omni, American History, Writer’s Digest, Coast Guard Magazine, Retired Officer Magazine, The Compass, Aviation History, Mother Jones, the Associated Press, the Los Angeles Times Sunday Opinion, and Travel sections, and many more. He was a lead contributor to the 1995 WWII anthology, "From Pearl Harbor to Nagasaki: America at War," published by the Retired Officer Association, and a contributor to the 2013 American Civil War anthology "Gettysburg: Three Days that Saved the United States," published by I-5 Publishing.

Martin's background plays a significant role in his writing, which many reviewers have noted has a sense of realism not often found in fiction. His first book, DUTY, a collection of short stories centered around national service, was named the 2012 Best Short Story Anthology/Collection by the San Diego Book Awards Association. His novel, The Butcher's Bill, received the Best Mystery/Suspense Novel of 2017 from the Best Independent Book Awards, the Clue Award for Best Suspense Thriller from the Chanticleer International Book Awards, the Silver Medal for Thrillers from the Readers Favorite Book Awards, and the award for Adult Fiction from the 2018 California Author Project.

Besides his novels, Martin's short stories have appeared in such publications as Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine, ALT HIST: The Journal of Historical Fiction and Alternative History, Mystery Weekly Magazine, Crimson Streets, Nebula Rift, Devolution Z, and others.

Martin is a professional member of the Mystery Writers of America, Sisters in Crime, and International Thriller Writers.

Customer reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
13 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on May 1, 2025
    Format: Kindle
    Twenty-five years after Peter Brandt's brother, Keith, was killed in Vietnam Peter received from Keith's former fiancee Rhonda. Peter was only ten years old at the time he brother was killed. Even though his family promised to stay in touch with Rhonda they never did. Rhonda told Peter that she needed to talk to him regarding Keith's death, that she had something she needed to show him. He agreed to meet her at the restaurant of the hotel she was staying at while she was in town on business. At the restaurant Rhonda tells Peter that she is not sure if Keith actually died.

    When Peter demands that Rhonda explain herself she states that she believes that the serviceman who was supposed to have been killed along with Keith is still alive. As possible proof she shows Peter a company brochure of a businessman she has been meeting with as part of her job. The picture had a caption naming the man as Thomas Danner. When asked for further explanation she believes that the person is actually named Thomas Dykstra, called TD by Keith, his best friend while in the Marines, who was supposed to been killed at the same time Keith was killed. She explains why she believes the two men are actually the same one, even though one was supposed to have died 25 years earlier.

    As a journalist most of his life Peter has covered a lot of military actions. As a journalist Peter is no stranger from internet searches. Peter had a hard time coming up with any firm information regarding anyone with the name Thomas Danner, or any possible variation of his name. The only possible information he found was researching the company that “TD” was working for. The brochure stated that Danner had over 20 years as top international import-export consulting firm working in Asia. The only thing that Peter could confirm that the firm actually helped was a fortune cookie producer and not IT products. While talking to Rhonda the deal Danner was trying to make was in buying computer, servers and software. While the products he was trying to buy was not allowed to be exported, due to possible military applications, the company Rhonda worked for was not really concerned what happened to the items once they were sold. Further research showed that Danner's firm was less than two years old and that the local Chamber of Commerce had no listing of knowledge of the firm. This seemed strange to Peter that a company wanted to make contacts to possible clients would not be a member.

    Peter decided to look into the battle that Keith and TD was to have died in. The reports Peter found had plenty of information regarding the battle, including maps, timelines and personal accounts about the battle. The only information could not found out about the battle was any mention of either Keith's or TD's names. During the research Peter wrote down some names of possible survivors from the battle than might live in the area. When Peter tried to contact Rhonda to inform her of his findings he had no luck in contacting her. The hotel she was staying at told Peter she was no longer registered there, even though she was supposed to be in town for several more days. Soon after he got home Peter received a phone call from a friend, Mike McCarty, who was also a homicide investigator with the San Diego police department. It turns out that Mike had earlier in the day pulling a body out of the San Diego Harbor, a body that happened to be Rhonda's and it was determined that her death was a murder case.

    Determined to find out exactly what was going on, was Danner actually TD, and if so could Keith still be alive. After talking to servicemen that were in the battle, officers that reported the deaths Peter finds out that what actually happened to his brother was not what was told to the family. Peter discovers that TD was actually no longer a member of Keith's unit but actually was part of the battalion supply company. Further investigation brings U.S. Customs into the mix, along with an agent belonging to Israel. With one or two other surprises Peter has to unravel the truth to his brother's death, if in fact he did die in Vietnam.
  • Reviewed in the United States on January 13, 2026
    Format: Kindle
    I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.

    This here book grabbed me right out the gate and did not let go. It aint flashy just to be loud. It digs in slow and steady, like somebody who knows the truth is gonna hurt but goes looking anyway. Peter has been carrying his brothers death since Vietnam, and you can feel that weight on every page. It reads like it was written by someone who has seen things and never quite set them down.

    The whole idea that his brother might not even be dead messes with your head, same as it messes with his. When Rhonda shows back up claiming wild things and then ends up dead, the story kicks into high gear real quick. From California all the way down to Costa Rica, it feels gritty, tense, and real. This is not some clean cut mystery. It is one where everybody has something to hide, and nobody is telling the whole truth.

    I liked how the past keeps bleeding into the present. Marines who do not remember what happened, folks who look like people who already died, crooked deals buried under old wars. It all stacks up and makes you wonder who you can trust, including Peter himself. The story does not hand you easy answers, and sometimes you are not even sure you want the answers, which feels honest.

    This is a solid thriller with brains, scars, and a mean streak of sadness running through it. It made me think and kept me turning pages, even when I did not like what I was learning.

    I give it a 4 outta 5 catfish!
  • Reviewed in the United States on May 2, 2025
    Format: Kindle
    Review of eBook

    Two bombs destroy a Saigon club in 1972 claiming the lives of two American Marines.

    Twenty-five years have passed since that day. Peter Brandt, still haunted by the death of his older brother Keith, receives a phone call from an old friend . . . Keith’s fiancé, Rhonda . . . and agrees to a meeting where Rhonda shares some unsettling news.

    Twenty-four hours later, Rhonda is dead. Suicide . . . or murder?

    =========

    Fourth in the author’s Peter Brandt Mysteries, there is sufficient backstory here for readers new to the series and for the book to work as a standalone. Well-defined characters and a strong sense of place pull readers into the telling of this sometimes-grim tale.

    As Peter investigates, trying to determine if Keith might still be alive or, if not, how he really died, scenes of war and add a gruesome honesty to the telling of the tale. Black market activities during the war are well-documented; Agent Orange has claimed the lives of thousands of soldiers who fought in the jungles of Vietnam. In the unfolding narrative, Peter’s investigation reveals these facts as they relate to characters readers meet in the story as well as to the events being recounted as Peter searches for the truth. It’s a reality that gives readers much food for thought.

    Readers who have enjoyed Peter Brandt’s previous adventures are sure to find much to appreciate here as will those who enjoy tales of mystery and exploration. Short chapters keep the action moving toward a denouement most will not see coming.

    Highly recommended.

    I received a free advance review copy of this book through BookSirens, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.
  • Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2025
    Format: Kindle
    Peter Brandt is seeking answers about how his older brother died in Vietnam. The information provided by the government just doesn't add up. His brother's former fiancee contacts Peter after 25 years claiming to have seen a man reported to have been killed along with Peter's brother. Thus begins an adventure that tests Peter's very being.
    If I have a criticism of the book it would be that the author repeated some things too often and tended to over explain military jargon (although I realize many readers may not be familiar with some of them). That said, this is an excellent mystery. There are plenty of suspects here. I enjoyed this book and will likely read more from this author.

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