After long stints with IBM and Westinghouse, Richard Noyes was associate director of the Center for Advanced Engineering Study at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Noyes is now a business consultant for public and private sector organizations. Pamela Robertson has held executive positions in several Fortune companies. She also led a marketing management consultancy that delivered strategic direction, product and service development, integrated marketing and branding to organizations nationwide. Robertson is currently a marketing leader at Experian, the global solutions organization. Also by Noyes and Robertson, GUTS IN THE CLUTCH: 77 Legendary Triumphs, Heartbreaks and Wild Finishes in 12 Sports, Illustrated, 329 pages, Amazon, with a Foreword by Drew Olson of ESPN and Past President of the Baseball Writers Association of America, and praise from David Houle, Emmy and Peabody-Award winning producer of documentaries on Hank Aaron and the Harlem Globetrotters. "This the best compilation of fascinating sports stories I have read." Order paperback copies or a Kindle Edition of GUTS IN THE CLUTCH from amazon.com - or use the Kindle app on your mobile device. Order paperback copies or a Kindle Edition of LARCENY OF LOVE from amazon.com - or use the Kindle app on your mobile device. A sampling of praise for Larceny of Love from readers nationwide: "I’ve read both books by Noyes and Robertson and can’t wait for the third. The latest, Larceny of Love, expresses the simultaneous and seemingly intractable problems of a father and son with many gratifying subplots connected, including some uncommon bad guys. The incisive and convincing outcome pounces on you." -Kevin Marcus, Chicago, Illinois "Finally, a book with many people you care about. I knew that as soon as I finished one chapter, the next had a good chance of being even more surprising. Larceny has dramatic episodes and imaginative writing of the first order." -Patti O’Halloran, Long Beach, California "The dialogue is smart, the characters vivid, the plot full of corkscrew twists." -Richard A. DeLia, Berkeley Heights, New Jersey