<p><span style=color: rgba(34 34 34 1)>Birdie&nbsp;lost everything when her son died. Now on track to rebuild her life she has to evade her abusive partner Russ's rage and manipulations while also worrying about a home-invading serial killer that has descended on her community.&nbsp;Told through multiple POVs from a decomposing murder victim to&nbsp;Birdie's day-to-day battle with domestic violence and grief to the horrific crimes of the killer&nbsp;</span><em style=color: rgba(34 34 34 1)>Shoot Me in the Face on a Beautiful Day</em><span style=color: rgba(34 34 34 1)>&nbsp;will shock disgust and break your heart as the dark secrets unfold and&nbsp;Birdie&nbsp;does whatever she feels is necessary to protect the ones she loves.&nbsp;</span><span style=color: rgba(63 63 63 1); background-color: rgba(255 255 255 1)></span></p><p></p><p><span style=color: rgba(63 63 63 1)>Of course you could use certain buzzwords like brutal and shocking to describe Emma E. Murray's novel&nbsp;</span><em style=color: rgba(63 63 63 1)>Shoot Me in the Face on a Beautiful Day</em><span style=color: rgba(63 63 63 1)>. However those words would immediately fail to capture the unflinching cruelty and viciousness layered within the pages of this brilliant and deeply unpleasant novel centered around abuse trauma and decay. Despite this richly textured nastiness there's also a distinct beauty an attraction toward the grotesque and the undesirable woven throughout this masterful work. Emma E. Murray is one of the most original and fearless writers of new transgressive fiction. </span><strong style=color: rgba(30 25 21 1)>-Eric LaRocca author of&nbsp;<em>Things Have Gotten Worse Since We Last Spoke</em></strong></p><p></p><p><span style=color: rgba(34 34 34 1); background-color: rgba(255 255 255 1)>Everyone in this book is damaged and Emma Murray is telling us how these wounds fester into diseased thoughts the devaluing of human life and the propagation of harm through rage and despair....A book for the hopeless and damned. </span><strong style=color: rgba(30 25 21 1)>-</strong><strong style=color: rgba(34 34 34 1)>Charlene Elsby author of&nbsp;<em>The Devil Thinks I'm Pretty&nbsp;</em>and&nbsp;<em>Red Flags</em></strong></p><p></p><p><em style=color: rgba(63 63 63 1)>Shoot Me in the Face on a Beautiful Day</em><span style=color: rgba(63 63 63 1)>&nbsp;is the stuff of domestic nightmares. Murray's novel gives the reader a fly-on-the-wall look at a monster. But fretting silently amidst the blood guts and depravity is its protagonist-grieving desperate and verging on breakdown. An eerily terrifying tale that brings true crime hypotheticals to life and imbues them with fragility strength and bone-deep sorrow. </span><strong style=color: rgba(63 63 63 1)>-Carson Winter author of&nbsp;<em>The Psychographist&nbsp;</em>and&nbsp;<em>Soft Targets</em></strong></p><p></p><p><span style=color: rgba(63 63 63 1)>There are some authors who I stand up and applaud immediately after reading their work and Emma E. Murray is one of them. Murray's writing is beautiful but brutal psychological yet spiritual. Her examination of society and of people their depths of despair and the effects of the machinations of manipulations is heart-wrenching.&nbsp;</span><em style=color: rgba(63 63 63 1)>Shoot Me in the Face on a Beautiful Day</em><span style=color: rgba(63 63 63 1)>&nbsp;is a socio-psychological and gruesome analysis and reconstruction of what and who we are how we became that and why. </span><strong style=color: rgba(30 25 21 1)>-</strong><strong style=color: rgba(63 63 63 1)>Cynthia Pelayo Bram Stoker Award-winning author of&nbsp;<em>Vanishing Daughters</em></strong></p>