A FRESH START! Although I have nine published novels and a travel memoir, I am excited to announce that I have a new publisher which has taken over the rights to all the books and is in the process of rebranding and republishing all of them. The first thriller in the Pancho series, Tropical Lies, is now available. See below for hyperlinks to purchase. It’s a good fun story, inspired by the true events of one of the biggest financial frauds in the history of Hawaii. As each book is republished, I will add the new cover art on this website and, if necessary, tweak the synopses. I’d love it if you and your friends to whom you refer my books will post reviews on your desired sales platforms. Reviews are the lifeblood of authors’ sales.
For those of you who don’t already know about me, I grew up in Southern California, went to colleges in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Honolulu, and back to San Francisco (almost got myself drafted by jumping around too much). I went to law school at the University of San Francisco School of Law, where I met my wife, Marcia Waldorf. After law school, we moved to Honolulu and began practicing law. I put out my shingle from day one and Marcia worked at the Public Defenders’ office. She eventually became a circuit court trial judge. I specialized in workers’ compensation and personal injury. I’ve always had a passion for writing and, during my college years in the 60s and 70s, I did freelance work for several publications and was a staff writer for a minority newspaper in Pasadena, CA. I began writing and eventually publishing my novels after retiring in 2010. My first book was a golf-related suspense novel (Unplayable Lie). I’ve heard that even non-golfers love that book, but it is especially fun for golfers. Then, once I got the stilted legalese from writing decades of briefs out of my system, I began my legal thrillers. Having bought a house in Taos, New Mexico, where we now live full time, I made my protagonist, Pancho McMartin, a native of Taos, where his parents had lived as original hippies in the 60s. His parents rather ridiculously claimed they named him Pancho so that he would get along better in the mostly Hispanic school system. His theory is that they dropped acid after he was born and named him while stoned. In any event, Pancho and his best friend and private investigator, Drew Tulafono, a former NFL lineman, are a great team. My stand-alone novels are all quite different and range from quasi-historical fiction (Son of Saigon and The Pinochet Plot), to the bizarrely fun, Rex, the Kid, the Whore, the Witch, and the Scientist, which I wrote during the pandemic when I desperately needed some humor. Words Kill, which is the only book available as an audiobook, takes place in the Bay Area in the 60s and 70s and addresses racism and other topics which have unfortunately once again become relevant. The travel memoir, Conga Line on the Amazon, includes two award-winning stories. Marcia and I have traveled the world many times and have been to sub-Saharan Africa fifteen times as of this writing. So the stories are a compilation of some of the offbeat and sometimes scary events we experienced in our travels. I hope you enjoy my stories enough to work your way through the books. Please feel free to contact me through this website or directly at [email protected]. Rex, the Kid, the Whore, the Witch, and the Scientist![]() When “golden boy” wealth manager Rex Reynold’s yacht was struck and sunk by a surfacing Russian submarine, his young son was lost at sea and his wife suffered a brain injury. The FBI, determined to cover up the Russian's involvement, forced Rex to accept the story that he was drunk and sank the yacht after running into a shoal. Naturally, Rex’s life changed forever. His wife, who had amnesia, blamed him for the loss of their son. After she took up with an Espiscopalian minister and filed for divorce, Rex sought refuge and enlightenment at MEXICO’S #1 RATED PSYCHEDELIC SPA, which led him to a small Mexican village where he met a young beggar named Reynaldo. There, he learned the story of Reynaldo’s mother, the puta (whore), his aunt, a possible witch (bruja), and his father, an American scientist. Rex’s already upside down life changed yet again as he helped Reynaldo; investigated a Ponzi scheme; and ultimately and accidentally learned what the Russian sub was doing off the coast of California.
WORDS KILL![]() Famed reporter Russell Blaze is dead. It appears to be an accident, but after Russ’s funeral, his son, Cody, finds a letter in which his father explains that the death may have been murder. It directs Cody to Russ’s unfinished memoir for clues as to what may have happened. The opening words are: On the night of October 16, 1968, I uttered a sentence that would haunt me for the rest of my life. The sentence was, “Someone should kill that motherfucker.”
As Cody delves into the memoir, a window opens into a tragic past and thrusts the still-burning embers of another time’s radical violence into the political reality of the present. History that once seemed far away becomes a deeply personal immersion for Cody into the storied heyday of the Haight: drugs, sex, war protesters, right-wing militias, ground-breaking journalism—and the mysterious Gloria, who wanders into his father’s pad one day to just “crash here for a while until things calm down.” Cody discovers aspects of his father’s life he never knew, and slowly begins to understand the significance of those words his father spoke in 1968. Words Kill is a story of loss, violence, and racism; love, hate, and discovery. It is a story of then… and now. Tropical Deception
![]() With some $200 million sunk into a real estate development plan in Kauai, the investment partners have a lot to lose if Peter Roosevelt succeeds in stopping the project for the sake of preserving Hawaii’s rich and exotic environment. When Roosevelt is found dead in his home, a suspect is quickly arrested—and becomes the latest challenge, and one of the toughest, for Honolulu’s top criminal defense attorney, Pancho McMartin.
The main obstacles in proving Wayne Takei innocent are tough to overcome: His gun is the murder weapon, and he has no alibi to help clear his name. Lies and deception quickly plague the proceedings, with Pancho and his team running out of time to save their client from life in prison, in this fourth novel of David Myles Robinson’s increasingly popular legal thriller series. Conga Line on the Amazon
![]() David Myles Robinson was eight years old when he first got hooked on travel. Since then, he’s seen most of the world—all its continents plus, he laments, “far too many places where travel is now off-limits.”After a lifetime of visiting near and far, in heat and in cold, in comfort and in danger, Robinson has put it all together now in this unique collection of the varied travel adventures he’s found—and the lessons he’s learned from them. A Fellini-esque view of the Amazon, a Mercedes caravan to Istanbul, Jane Goodall's amazing chimps—just part of a travel trunk full of experiences guaranteed to keep you seesawing from “Boy, I'd love to do that" to “Sure glad it was him, not me.”In Conga Line on the Amazon, Robinson brings to his first travel book the same gift for intriguing narrative and sharp characterization that has won praise for his six highly successful novels. Some of his tales may be for the strong of heart, but they’re all for the reader with a yen to be entertained by one intrepid man’s adventures and misadventures exploring the strange and wonderful world we live in.
Tropical Doubts
![]() Some Honolulu lawyers called Pancho McMartin the best criminal defense attorney in the islands. He’d admit to being pretty damn good. But he was on a losing streak now―three guilty verdicts in a row―and his confidence was sinking fast. When one of his oldest friends, Giselle, was left comatose after surgery and her husband, Manny, pleaded with him to sue the doctors involved, Pancho couldn’t find a way to avoid a new specialty: medical malpractice. But it wasn’t long before the sudden death of one of the defendants—and a murder charge accusing Manny of being the killer—had Pancho back in the old familiar arena of fighting for his client’s life, while at the same time seeking justice for the O.R. errors that had left Giselle in a permanent vegetative state. In Tropical Doubts, the third legal thriller from David Myles Robinson featuring colorful, fast-thinking Pancho McMartin, medical hijinks merge with murder as surprise twists build in this unpredictable courtroom drama.
Son of Saigon
![]() Hank and Norm were living the good life: two friends with plenty of money, homes in a lovely California retirement town, and no problems--except for the boredom that felt almost fatal. Then Mai came into the picture, the love of Hank's life during his CIA days in Saigon, desperately needing his help to save the son he'd never known he had. Boredom was over, as Hank and Norm hit the road, following the few clues Mai could give them in search of a man who desperately wants not to be found. What they find is a slew of lies and hidden truths, strange characters, improbable danger that has them fighting to survive, and the happy lesson that their lives are far from over.
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More Books by David Myles Robinson
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UNPLAYABLE LIEWhen Eddie Bennett began playing golf as a way to bond with his father, he quickly displayed a rare talent for the game. After a long and at times tragic road to the PGA Tour, all of his hard work seems about to pay off when it looked as if Eddie would be a sure candidate for Rookie of the Year.
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