About The Author
Wayne Abrahamson, originally from Elroy, Wisconsin, spent twenty-four years in the US Navy, serving aboard destroyers and in the Navy’s elite special-warfare unit, Special Boat Unit Twelve. While in the Navy, he also qualified as a private pilot, parachute jumper, and divemaster (Professional Association of Diving Instructors). After retiring from service, he qualified as a master scuba diver (National Association of Underwater Instructors) and earned several undergraduate and graduate degrees specializing in underwater archaeology and maritime history.
After years of experiencing the Middle East, Southeast Asia, and the western Pacific during his naval service, Wayne Abrahamson settled in Pensacola, Florida. When not working on future novellas and novels Wayne enjoys traveling to the Caribbean and Latin America, with his wife of 40-plus years, as inspirations for writing future novels of action-adventure, mystery, and historical fiction.
Explore Wayne’s Novels



Reviews from Readers
Wayne’s writing style reminds me of Clive Cussler and his character Dirk Pitt with all of Dirk’s adventures. Another author he reminds me of is James Grippando and his Jack Swyteck thrillers. Jack always seems to find trouble. Just like Joe Havok does in this novel. There are many surprising twists and turns that will keep you wanting to read just one more page. I hope there are more adventures in the future for Joe Havok and his partner Pete Stone or more from Wayne with other characters!
Marla A.
What a fun read! Science fiction is not a genre of novels I usually read, but The Martian Sentence was as much adventure as scifi, if not more. The name of the main character sounds right out of an adventure novel. Geoff Manwaring is an adventure hero with a worthy foe in billionare explorer Angar Enstok, a villanous name if ever there was one. The settings, action, and plot all satisfy and live up to the expectations I have when I open a Wayne Abrahamson novel. The Martian Sentence is a fun read for anyone who love exploration narratives and want to experience what that might look like on Mars.
Gina Sakalarios-Rogers