From the author's website
Hi. I’m Robert Bidinotto, a.k.a. “The Vigilante Author.”
I adopted that label from the theme of my debut suspense novel, HUNTER: A Thriller, a devious tale that centers around a wave of vigilante killings. I thought that the vigilante concept was uniquely suited to what I am trying to do here.
Before I get into that, though, let me introduce myself to you. I’m a widely published, award-winning investigative journalist, magazine editor, and nonfiction author. And now—novelist.
HUNTER: A Thriller was published in June 2011. Bridging and blending the crime and spy-fiction genres, and with a powerful love story at its heart, HUNTER is a unique suspense thriller. It draws upon my colorful experiences as an investigative journalist writing true-crime books and articles.
And it’s struck a responsive chord with readers around the world. Just one month after its release, HUNTER became the #1 “Top Rated in Romantic Suspense” on the Kindle, based on customer reviews. It’s been #1 “Top Rated in Thrillers,” “Spy Stories and Tales of Intrigue,” “Romance,” and in “Mysteries & Thrillers,” too. In sales, it ranks regularly among the “Top 50 Bestsellers in Spy Stories & Tales of Intrigue” and in “Romantic Suspense.”
If you haven’t yet read it, I hope you check it out at the links elsewhere on this blog. HUNTER is available as an ebook for virtually every ereading device, and as a trade paperback.
As for my previous books: I’m editor of and chief contributor to the widely acclaimed Criminal Justice? The Legal System vs. Individual Responsibility, with a Foreword by John Walsh of TV’s “America’s Most Wanted.” I also wrote Freed to Kill, a compendium of horror stories that exposed the terrible failings of our legal system. Many of those hair-raising stories, as well as ones that I investigated for Reader’s Digest, served as the basis for my fiction thriller, HUNTER.
While working as a Staff Writer for Reader’s Digest, I authored high-profile investigative pieces on crime and other public controversies. I’m perhaps best known for my article “Getting Away with Murder” in the July 1988 issue of the Digest. It stirred a national controversy about crime and prison furlough programs during the 1988 presidential election campaign, and it’s widely credited with having affected the outcome of the election. That article was honored as a 1989 National Magazine Award finalist by the American Society of Magazine Editors.
From 2005-2008, I served as editor-in-chief of The New Individualist magazine. While editor, I was a 2007 Gold Winner of Folio’s prestigious “Eddie” Award for editorial excellence—the magazine industry’s highest honor. I also received the Free Press Association’s Mencken Award for “Best Feature Story,” as well as other awards and honors from the National Victim Center and victim rights organizations, for my outspoken public advocacy on behalf of crime victims.
My articles, essays, columns, book and film reviews have appeared in Success, Writer’s Digest, The Boston Herald, The American Spectator, and may other journals. I’ve appeared on scores of radio and television talk shows, and I’ve lectured before campus, civic, business, and public affairs organizations throughout North America and in Europe.
Today, I live with my wife, Cynthia, and our stridently individualistic cat, Luna (who plays a supporting role in HUNTER) on the Chesapeake Bay. There, in a home suspiciously similar to one described in the novel, I am busily at work plotting the further exploits of Dylan Hunter.