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Novel
Deadly Delivery
by Peter Freeman
On opposite sides of the world, two female pilots, North Korean and Canadian, are given cryptic instructions. For Soo-jin, it is a mysterious mission that involves their old enemy; for Cynthia, it becomes a sleuthing exercise to determine what the North Koreans are up to. Through the cold months of winter, Soo-jin is ordered to travel to remote and secret locations for her mission training. As spring emerges, both women grow more troubled as they independently begin to piece together the sinister purpose of the mission.
Soo-jin’s exposure to new cultures erodes the conditioning imposed on her by her repressive regime as she travels through China, Canada, and into the United States of America. Her old notions of truth, enemy, and loyalty are overturned and she finds herself caught in a dilemma between her patriotism and her moral code. Cynthia does not fully understands the diabolical purpose of Soo-jin’s role until the pair are on board an aircraft and its deadly cargo. It is high in the sky where the horror of the mission and its potentially devastating consequences becomes crystal clear.
Peter Freeman is a Canadian author whose work is shaped by a lifetime of adventure, endurance, and reflection. Based on Salt Spring Island, he writes fiction and nonfiction that explore resilience, human complexity, and the quiet forces that shape our lives.
Born in Noosa Heads, Australia, Peter’s early life unfolded along oceans and open horizons. He went on to sail across the Tasman Sea, build his own boat, and later complete a solo, non-stop circumnavigation of the globe in a record-setting 236 days—an experience captured in his memoir Cape Horn Birthday.
Beyond the sea, his life has been marked by movement and discipline. He has represented Canada internationally as a masters athlete and twice cycled across the country. At 61, he rode 15,400 kilometres around Australia—unsupported—in just 79 days.
Peter’s writing draws from this rich and varied life, blending lived experience with imagination. His stories range from literary fiction and psychological narratives to short stories, plays, and poetry. His work has received national and international recognition, including awards from Mensa Canada and The Fieldstone Review.
Across all genres, Peter writes with clarity, emotional depth, and a deep curiosity about what drives people—especially in moments of challenge, transformation, and survival.
