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In the latest pulse-pounding thriller from Edgar and Barry Award
finalist Mike Lawson, beloved Washington DC "troubleshooter" Joe
DeMarco finds himself assigned an impossible case: help take down the
President of the United States.
Brandon Cartwright was a rich guy worth a couple billion
bucks--inherited, of course--meaning he hadn't worked a day in his
life. But he sure knew how to party, and the people he rubbed shoulders
with were all sorts of rich and famous: politicians and movie stars and
British royalty and Russian oligarchs. So when Brendan Cartwright is
executed in his own home, the cops quickly conclude that he was most
likely killed by one or more of the rich, powerful people he partied
with.
But when John Mahoney, the former Speaker of the House, emerges from a
clandestine meeting with the head of the National Archives, he learns
there's evidence suggesting that the President of the United States was
somehow involved with Cartwright's death. Mahoney needs someone who can
investigate from the shadows--enter Joe DeMarco, Mahoney's fixer.
DeMarco is no stranger to hunting down some of the very worst people
Washington D.C. has to offer. In fact, he's made a career of it. But as
evidence continues to point towards the President, DeMarco is faced
with an impossible situation: investigating a man who is quite
literally untouchable.
In House Privilege, the fourteenth novel in the DeMarco series,
Mike Lawson sends his likeable protagonist on a journey that begins
in Boston and ends up in a country beyond the reach of the law.
Fifteen-year-old Cassie Russell, the only daughter of a mega-rich
Boston couple, is the sole survivor of a plane crash that killed
her parents. She's also the goddaughter of the newly elected
Speaker of the House, John Mahoney, and after the crash Mahoney
becomes her legal guardian. Normally, Mahoney would send his
kind-hearted wife to deal with his new ward, but she's unavailable
so he dispatches his fixer, Joe DeMarco, to make sure the girl's
okay. DeMarco's job is only to put things into a holding pattern
until Mrs. Mahoney is able to step in and take charge--but DeMarco
unintentionally flips over a rock and out from under it crawls a
lawyer, the one managing Cassie's vast estate. DeMarco learns the
lawyer has been embezzling from the estate and may have killed
Cassie's parents. What should have been a simple assignment
unleashes murderous plots involving a Boston mob boss and his Irish
thugs, and things quickly escalate from there. DeMarco ends up
chasing the scheming lawyer halfway around the world to save Cassie
and ensure that justice is done. And, this being DeMarco, the legal
niceties are mostly ignored. House Privilege is one of the best
instalments yet in Edgar Award-nominee Mike Lawson's long-running
series.
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Payback
Mike Lawson
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R109
Discovery Miles 1 090
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Ships in 5 - 7 working days
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Sent to investigate what he thinks is a case of fraud at a US naval base, all round good-guy and Washington troubleshooter Joe DeMarco soon realises that he’s stumbled on something even more lethal.Accompanied by Emma, an ex Defence Intelligence Agent, DeMarco comes up against a ruthless and vengeful woman, whose hatred of his colleague stems back to when both women were submerged in the cold war. Their encounter destroyed the woman’s career and turned her into a ruthless operative intent on destroying Emma.DeMarco has never been near a spy in his life, and now he is faced with one of the deadliest in the business of espionage, and what’s more he’s not convinced this is someone he can fight. But this time, it’s not just his own life at stake.
Orson Mulray, CEO of Mulray Pharma, has discovered a drug that
could prevent a previously incurable disease and make him billions
of dollars. But the drug needs to be tested on humans to prove its
efficacy, and Mulray needs more than blood samples - he needs
autopsy results.
In naive Lizzie Warwick, Mulray finds a solution. Warwick provides
relief to victims of wars and natural disasters ? in other words,
people who'd make perfect test subjects. But Warwick's D.C.
lobbyist discovers what Mulray is doing. Mulray has the lobbyist
killed and frames his partner, Brian Kincaid, for murder.
Two years later, DeMarco is asked to look into the seemingly
hopeless case. He has other worries on his mind: his girlfriend has
left him, and his friend Emma may be dying. DeMarco doesn't expect
to free Kinkaid - much less to become the target of two of the most
callous killers he and Emma have ever encountered.
Praise for House Blood
The plot and pace are relentless, and the milieus of Congress,
D.C., and disaster relief seem knowingly presented. But character
creation is Lawson's greatest talent, and Fiona, her supersoldiers,
and of course, the ever-cranky cynic, DeMarco, will rivet readers'
attention. A host of lesser characters are nearly as engaging.
House Blood is so good it will move long-time political-thriller
readers to recall the memorable characters, with, and style of the
late, great Ross Thomas. -Booklist (starred review)
Lawson's seventh novel in his Joe DeMarco thriller series is
another page-turner brimming with authentic Washington, DC, detail
and distinctive, engaging characters. Even the bad guys are
interesting. Adventure-seeking readers will love it].-Library
Journal
As ever, DeMarco is] good at tracking the bad guys--and it's fun to
watch him at it. -Publishers Weekly
A what-happens-next, edge-of-your-seat thriller, told with the
author's clear prose and storytelling skills.--George Easter,
Deadly Pleasures
Joe DeMarco likes to call himself a troubleshooter. It sounds
better than "bagman" or "fixer." With more than a decade of
troubleshooting under his belt on behalf of John Mahoney, the
Speaker of the House, DeMarco has seen his fair share of dangerous
situations. When Andie Moore, a 23-year-old working in the DOJ's
Inspector General's Office, is murdered in cold blood in Florida's
Everglades, it falls on DeMarco to get to the bottom of things.
Paired with Emma, an enigmatic, retired ex-spy with seemingly
endless connections in the military and intelligence communities,
they venture south to the scene of Andie's murder: Alligator Alley.
DeMarco and Emma waste no time in identifying a two suspects--a
pair of crooked, near-retirement FBI agents named McIntyre and
McGruder. But as they keep digging, it becomes clear that these FBI
agents weren't acting alone, and that this goes much deeper than
just the murder of an innocent 23-year old woman.
When someone close to him is shot dead in a roadside motel in a
small-town in Wyoming, DeMarco shirks his responsibilities as the
Speaker of the House's fixer to make sure the authorities are doing
everything that can be done to catch the killer. He soon realizes
that the rural area is dominated by Hiram Bunt, a wealthy rancher
with an obstructionist streak who is willing to take on the federal
government at gunpoint and seems to have a number of politicians
under his thumb. But Bunt is not the only one in the way. DeMarco
also learns that his friend--a woman he was once in love with--had
unearthed a number of explosive secrets during her time in the
backwoods, and that the deputy in charge of the investigation may
be ignoring several leads to preserve a secret of his own.
Surrounded by people willing to kill to maintain the status quo,
DeMarco launches his own investigation into a growing list of
intertwining suspects. And being DeMarco, he concludes that
breaking the law to uncover the truth is the best way to ensure
that justice is done. Gripping and genuinely unpredictable to the
very end.
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House Odds (Paperback)
Mike Lawson
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R484
R456
Discovery Miles 4 560
Save R28 (6%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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"Odds favor a good time for the reader as DeMarco faces his eighth
case: a looming insider trading scandal with potentially fatal
consequences. . . . One of the most enjoyable in the series."
--Kirkus Reviews Spotted Owl Award for Best Mystery Novel by a
Northwest Author Washington, D.C. fixer Joe DeMarco has been asked
to handle a lot of difficult situations over the years for his
boss, congressman John Mahoney. But nothing has ever been quite so
politically sensitive, or has hit so close to home, as the task
Mahoney hands DeMarco in House Odds. Mahoney's daughter has been
arrested and charged with insider trading. An engineer with a
high-flying technology firm, she allegedly placed a half-million
dollar bet on one of the firm's clients. DeMarco's job is to clear
her name and keep his boss clean. But how did she get her hands on
so much money to invest in the first place? Before long, DeMarco
uncovers far more about the case than meets the eye, and the risk
to Mahoney is more than just a little political embarrassment.
In the eleventh novel in Mike Lawson's bestselling series, Joe
DeMarco helps an elderly woman threatened by a shady real estate
developer, then seeks revenge. Joe DeMarco works for Congress. He's
a lawyer with an office in the Capitol and the title of Counsel Pro
Tem for Liaison Affairs. But the title is nonsense; DeMarco doesn't
practice law, he's a fixer. In House Revenge, DeMarco's powerful
boss, Congressman John Mahoney, dispatches him to his hometown of
Boston. Mahoney wants DeMarco to help out an elderly woman named
Elinore Dobbs who is holding out against a real estate developer
intent on tearing down her apartment building for a massive new
development. Elinore is all that stands in the way of about a
million square feet of new office space, a hotel, retail shops,
restaurants, and a new public park. Mahoney figures he can score
some free publicity, get his constituent a nice buyout, and ease
into his next reelection. That is, until Elinore refuses to budge
and Sean Callahan, the developer, disrespects him. Even worse,
Elinore suffers a horrible accident, possibly at the hands of two
thugs on Callahan's payroll. Now Mahoney and DeMarco are out for
revenge. DeMarco tries to dig up dirt through Callahan's friends
and family, but it's only when he gets a tip on the source of
Callahan's financing that things get deadly. A fast-paced adventure
into the cutthroat world behind the wrecking ball, House Revenge is
another gripping tale of collusion and corruption from a beloved
political thriller writer.
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Bottled Wounds (Paperback)
Mike Lawson; Edited by Tobyn Lawson; Illustrated by Kerry Clavadetscher
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R445
Discovery Miles 4 450
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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In the new novel in Mike Lawson's critically acclaimed series, Joe
DeMarco is dispatched to aid a young activist in North Dakota, and
confronts an oil tycoon and a pair of fixers whose tactics are
all-too-familiar. As a fixer for influential congressman John
Mahoney in Washington, D.C., Joe DeMarco has found himself in
plenty of unexpected and dangerous situations. In House Rivals, the
tenth book in Mike Lawson's award-winning series, DeMarco is taken
further out of his element than ever before, sent to North Dakota
to protect a passionate but naive twenty-two-year-old blogger who
has put herself in harm's way. The young woman is Sarah Johnson,
whose grandfather saved Mahoney's life in Vietnam. For the past two
years, Sarah has been on a relentless crusade against a billionaire
oil tycoon who has profited handsomely from the natural gas boom in
the Dakotas--and who she believes has been bribing small-time
politicians and judges to keep things in his favor. Though she has
no hard evidence against the man, Sarah has been assaulted and
received death threats for her meddling. DeMarco, given his years
of experience bending the rules in D.C., suspects that a middleman
like himself is pulling strings for the tycoon. But as DeMarco
tries to identify his adversaries, the situation turns unexpectedly
violent, and DeMarco finds himself in a battle of wits against two
ruthless problem solvers who will stop at nothing to win. Smartly
written with Lawson's trademark smooth prose and subtle humor,
House Rivals is an enthralling, timely thriller that readers won't
want to miss.
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