Wildcard
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- $ 13.900,00
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- $ 13.900,00
Descripción editorial
When the deck has been stacked against you, working outside the law is the only card left to play
Following a victorious evening, shots ring out, leaving the Democratic presidential front-runner near death. As the official investigation begins, FBI special agent Tom Lawton is sidelined, given work intended to keep him out of the way. Determined to find out why, he launches an investigation of his own–and uncovers a web of deceit constructed by his own superiors. Soon he has uncovered far too much.
Working alone is no longer an option, and Tom's only hope is Agent Renate Bachle, a woman with secrets of her own. On the run for his life, he must determine whether he can trust this mysterious foreigner to guide him through the corridors of a conspiracy that threatens a nation, or whether she is simply another spider in the web….
About the author
Rachel Lee was hooked on writing by the age of twelve, and practiced her craft as she moved from place to place all over the United States. This New York Times bestselling author now resides in Florida and has the joy of writing full-time.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Best known for her romantic fiction, Lee (aka Sue Civil-Brown) has shown a flair for suspense in recent works like her paranormal medical mystery Something Deadly. Now she delivers a highly complex thriller, the first in a new series. The titular wildcard, FBI special agent Tom Lawson, is assigned to investigate political fringe groups after an assassination attempt on a Democratic presidential candidate, but is taken off the case after he uncovers evidence that points instead to a sinister, spiderlike conspiracy reaching deep within powerful political, business and religious organizations-and back to 1329 B.C. As the plot flashes from ancient Egypt to medieval Syria to present-day Idaho and Guatemala, mysterious foreigner Renate Bachle persuades frustrated loner Lawson to abandon the FBI for her own secret organization of justice-seeking outsiders. While Lee's fans may be disappointed that there's little room for romance, the author's deft use of dialogue to make her stories convincing works as well with conspiracy theories as with contemporary romances, promising to attract an entirely new readership. Agent, Helen Breitwieser.