As we read in the newspapers and magazines the drivel that we do not torture and all the other supposed facts along comes a fiction Novel more to fact than some wish to see. Micheal Rose is caught up into what he believes is a financial hostile takeover but is much more than that. Slowly he discovers internal things that affect his family and friends. The understanding of this and eventual direction of the story is very interesting...
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I have read four previous Stephen Frey novels, and they have all been great. This one is especially timely. His novels have a financial background, but he writes in layman terms, so anyone that does not have a business acumen, can still enjoy them .... and learn a lot about financial issues. Some readers complain that his stories are unrealistic and not credible. I do not agree, because truth is stranger than fiction...
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If you are major fan of Stephen Frey (as I am), you may have been a little disappointed by his last 2 books in the Christian Gillette series. While The Chairman: A Novel was perhaps his finest work, the subsequent sequels have been progressively worse. Finally, that downward spiral has been reversed with The Fourth Order. This work is quite timely, addressing the issues of domestic spying and torture, it still works around...
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National security thrillers are about treachery and power and no one writes these mysteries better than Frey in this story about a secret government agency working to combat terrorism.
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It's been a while since a stand-alone work from Stephen Frey has been released. That state of affairs is remedied with THE FOURTH ORDER, a fast-paced and thoroughly readable potboiler (and that, from me, is a compliment) that continues the author's practice of piercing the complicated and complex veil of high finance. The novel's protagonist is Michael Rose, the Chief Financial Officer (CFO) for Trafalgar Industries, a major...
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