Prairie Dogs PPL
A Near-Future Novel
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- 6,99 $
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- 6,99 $
Description de l’éditeur
Eleven days in the year 2012 propel us through the streets and inner offices of Washington, D.C. When an aggressive Washington Post reporter reveals a secret meeting with Supreme Court Justices, the Hennessey Administration’s re-election campaign implodes. Higher ups at Justice and the NSC square off; the all-powerful MICs fight to retain their lucrative control of US satellite launches; and an unexpected player surprises them all. Standing apart from politics, Christopher Brock and his BTP Corporation energize Cesare Rosati’s dramatic glimpse into the near future. A must read from an exciting new author. – Harriet Freiberger, author of Lucien Maxwell, Villain or Visionary
Political intrigue, entrenched military industrialists, judicial chicanery and, of course, the media, rock Washington, DC in the year 2012 when a court decision is handed down in favor of private space launches. The fight is on to keep the status quo, but a small, upstart corporation bursts out of secrecy with a new technology set to leave them all behind. Told in a conversational style, this intriguing blend of political thriller with science fiction provides a fascinating journey into the near future that is not to be missed. – Kathleen Cunningham Guler, author of In the Shadow of Dragons
About the Author:
Cesare F. Rosati was born in Italy in 1946 and immigrated to the U.S. at the age of nine. A graduate of West Point (Class of 1970), he served in the U.S. Army for seven years obtaining a graduate degree in electronics from Stanford University during his service. In 1995 he retired after a career with the US Department of State, where he served as the Head of a US Delegation engaged in classified international negotiations.
In the late 1990s, after nearly forty years of writing poetry, Mr. Rosati turned to novels. Prairie Dogs PPL, first of a five-book series he has planned, was published in 2005 and followed recently by Adriana (SV-1). Readers eagerly await continuation of the Brock family’s ‘near-future’ ventures into outer space and global politics.
However, success with novels has not diminished his love of poetry. In Love & Life, he takes an uncommon perspective on the poetic form. Using animate and inanimate objects to impart his particular brand of advice, the author offers a welcome comic flair to, often confused, teenage boys as they explore the two topics noted in the title - love and life.