Done In One is a vivid, visceral look at the world of the police sniper, and it gets your adrenal gland working overtime.” Stephen Hunter, New York Times bestselling author of I, Sniper
“A rare treat a lean, fast-paced thriller with touchingly human characters and moments of startling insight.” John Verdon, bestselling author of Think of a Number
“There is a haunting, inescapable lethality to Done In One. Through the scope of a sniper's weapon, we witness both the disturbing simplicity and the infinite complexities of the heroic kill, and are forever changed in the process.” John Burley, author of The Absence of Mercy
“What great entertainment! A plot that screams, characters you care about, all told in vivid detail. Done in One takes you inside the very small world of police snipers and makes it very, very real.” John Gilstrap, author of End Game and the Jonathan Grave thriller series
“Lean and direct, Done in One knows exactly what it is - a shot of adrenaline between two covers, but with enough heart not to leave the reader at arm's length. Jerkins and Thomas don't flinch, and they bring a twisting plot to a bold, satisfying conclusion.” Jamie Mason, author of Three Graves Full
“Tightens like a noose. I've read Grant Jerkins for years, and pairing with Jan Thomas has only seemed to up his game. A stark, spare thriller that you'll read faster than a bullet flies. If Jack Reacher ever got in touch with his feminine side, you'd have Done in One.” Jenny Milchman, author of Cover of Snow
“A high-powered bone-rattler of a novel.” Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“A thriller, a crime novel, a philosophical disquisition-no, no, it's a thriller, all right, nonstop, with a tremendous finish. But it is a novel about a sniper-a police, swat-team sniper-and it reflects sometimes very thoughtfully on the sniper's place in the moral world (or rather, its people do).” Sullivan County Democrat
“The authors are masters of the in-your-face surprise, and I will confess to jumping more than once as the story progressed to its ending.” Bookreporter.com