- by foxnews
- 31 Jul 2025
"Throughout my years as a prosecutor, I've learned that those who do this work best don't just argue cases, they endure the fear, anger, pain, and loss of innocence of the victims they are fighting for. This book is a rare window into how the pursuit of justice doesn't end with the verdict; it lingers long after the courtroom lights have dimmed," Gowdy said.
"The Color of Death" is a dark mystery that follows Assistant District Attorney Colm Truesdale, who is left mentally scarred following the death of his wife and daughter. After some time off, Truesdale is brought back into the murder investigation of a young woman who runs a beauty salon outside of town. When a page from her appointment book goes missing, and then the crime scene burns down, it's up to Truesdale to untangle the web of deception that implicates a powerful judge and his family.
"I lived that unique relationship that prosecutors have with victims, that unique relationship that we have with law enforcement, and what being surrounded by death does to you," Gowdy said on "FOX & Friends" when announcing the project.
Gowdy said he wanted to offer readers a first-hand look at the steps it takes to prosecute a murder.
"I want them in the driver's seat with me from the moment a murder happens until the verdict comes back, the role that prosecutors play, the impact it has on everybody involved, so it's a psychological crime drama. Yes, it's a whodunit, yes it's the roller coaster of emotions that you go through, but it's also the psychology of what death does to people," Gowdy said.
"I lived it," he added. "I lived it for almost two decades."
Gowdy hosts the hit weekend primetime show "Sunday Night in America" on Fox News Channel, and "The Trey Gowdy Podcast" on FOX News Audio.
Greyson, an award-winning author of mystery, action, and thriller novels, is recognized as one of the top 100 Kindle authors of all time with over 3.5 million eBooks, print copies and audiobooks sold.
The novel will mark the 16th title for FOX News Books, which has surpassed three million copies sold since its launch in 2020.
Wooden remains of the Earl of Chatham, a British warship from 1749 that was used during the American Revolution, were discovered by a schoolboy on one of Scotland's Orkney Islands.
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