Jumat, 25 Februari 2011

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The Gangster (An Isaac Bell Adventure), by Clive Cussler, Justin Scott

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The Gangster (An Isaac Bell Adventure), by Clive Cussler, Justin Scott

Turn-of-the-century Detective Isaac Bell takes on the upstart leader of a vicious crime organization in this novel in the #1 New York Times–bestselling series.
 
It is 1906, and in New York City, the Italian crime group known as the Black Hand is on a spree: kidnapping, extortion, arson. They like to take the oldest tricks and add dynamite. When a coalition of the Black Hand’s victims hire out the Van Dorn agency to protect their businesses, their reputations, and their families, Detective Isaac Bell forms a crack squad and begins scouring the city for clues. And then he spots a familiar face.

The stakes grow ever-higher, with the Black Hand becoming more ambitious, and their targets more political. If Bell can’t determine the role played by the face from his past, the next life lost could be one of the most powerful men in the nation.

  • Sales Rank: #19084 in Books
  • Brand: PUTNAM
  • Published on: 2017-02-07
  • Released on: 2017-02-07
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 7.50" h x .96" w x 4.25" l,
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 448 pages
Features
  • PUTNAM

Review
Praise for The Gangster

“Cussler’s thrilling ninth Isaac Bell adventure pits Bell against Antonia Branco, who’s outwardly a respectable New York City businessman, but is in fact a ruthless crime boss . . . A fascinating and suspenseful plot.” —Publishers Weekly

“As usual, the latest Bell thriller combines a vivid historical environment with a top-notch story and enjoyable, realistic characters. Bell, the detective whose nimble intellect often gets him out of tight situations, is one of Cussler’s most engaging protagonists, and the series remains fresh and exciting.” —Booklist

“Cussler has written another wonderful historical thriller. The action is fast and thoroughly enjoyable.” —Library Journal

Praise for the Isaac Bell Novels

“Cussler and Scott have written another wonderful page-turner. This is historical action-adventure fiction at its rip-roaring best!” —Library Journal (starred review)

“As always in this series, the novel is very exciting, with excellent pacing and some very well-drawn characters. Cussler is a perennial A-lister, popularity-wise, and his Isaac Bell novels are the pick of his prodigious litter.” —Booklist

“The Isaac Bell series is a fun jaunt into America’s past and the books are a wonderful examination of life in the early twentieth century.” —Associated Press

“The Assassin is . . . action-movie-paced entertainment.” —Kirkus Reviews

About the Author
Clive Cussler is the author or coauthor of over fifty previous books in five bestselling series, including Dirk Pitt®, NUMA® Files, Oregon® Files, Isaac Bell, and Sam and Remi Fargo. His nonfiction works include Built for Adventure: The Classic Automobiles of Clive Cussler and Dirk Pitt, and Built to Thrill: More Classic Automobiles from Clive Cussler and Dirk Pitt, plus The Sea Hunters and The Sea Hunters II; these describe the true adventures of the real NUMA, which, led by Cussler, searches for lost ships of historic significance. With his crew of volunteers, Cussler has discovered more than sixty ships, including the long-lost Confederate ship Hunley. He lives in Colorado and Arizona.
 
Justin Scott’s novels include The Shipkiller and The Man Who Loved The Normandie; the Ben Abbott detective series; and modern sea thrillers published under the pen name Paul Garrison. He is the coauthor with Cussler of seven Isaac Bell novels. Scott lives in Connecticut.


From the Hardcover edition.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
1
Little Sicily, New York City
Elizabeth Street between Prince and Houston
“The Black Hand Block”
 
 
The Black Hand locked twelve-year Maria Vella in a pigeon coop on the roof of an Elizabeth Street tenement. They untied the gag so she wouldn’t suffocate. Not even a building contractor as rich as her father would ransom a dead girl, they laughed. But if she screamed, they said, they would beat her. A vicious jerk of one of her glossy braids brought tears to her eyes.
            She tried to slow her pounding heart by concentrating on the calmness of the birds. The pigeons murmured softly among themselves, oblivious to the racket from the slum, undisturbed by a thousand shouts, a piping street organ, and the thump and whirr of sewing machines. She could see through a wall of wooden slats that admitted light and air that the coop stood beside the high parapet that rimmed the roof. Was there someone who would help her on the other side? She whispered Hail Marys to build her courage.
            “ . . . Santa Maria, Madre di Dio,
            prega per noi peccatori,
            adesso e nell'ora della nostra morte.”
            Coaxing a bird out of her way, she climbed up on its nesting box, and up onto another until she glimpsed a tenement across the street draped with laundry. Climbing higher, pressing her head to the ceiling, she could see all the way down to a stretch of sidewalk four stories below. It was jammed with immigrants. Peddlers, street urchins, women shopping, not one of them could help her. They were Sicilians, transplanted workers and peasants, poor as dirt, and as frightened of the authorities as she was of her kidnappers.
            She clung to the comforting sight of people going about their lives, a housewife carrying a chicken from the butcher, workmen drinking wine and beer on the steps of the Kips Bay Saloon. A Branco Grocery wagon clattered by, painted gleaming red and green enamel with the owner’s name in gold leaf. Antonio Branco had hired her father’s business to excavate a cellar for his warehouse on Prince Street. So near, so far, the wagon squeezed past the push carts and out of sight.
            Suddenly the people scattered. A helmeted, blue-coated, brass-buttoned Irish policeman lumbered into view. He was gripping a baton and Maria’s hopes soared. But if she screamed through the wooden slats, would anyone hear before the kidnappers burst in and beat her? She lost her courage. The policeman passed. The immigrants pressed back into the space he had filled.
            A tall man glided from the Kips Bay Saloon.
            Lean as a whip, he wore workman’s garb, a shabby coat and a flat cap. He glanced across the street and up the tenement. His gaze fixed on the parapet. For a second she thought he was looking at her, straight into her eyes. But how could he know she was locked inside the coop? He swept his hat off his head as if signaling someone. At that moment, the sun cleared a rooftop and a shaft of light struck his crown of golden hair.
            He stepped into the street and disappeared from view.
 
***
 
The thick-necked Sicilian stationed just inside the front door blocked the tenement hall. A blackjack flew at his face. He sidestepped it, straight into the path of a fist in his gut that doubled him over in silent anguish. The blackjack, a leather sack of lead shot, smacked the bone behind his ear and he dropped to the floor.
            At the top of four flights of dark, narrow stairs, another Sicilian guarded the ladder to the roof. He pawed a pistol from his belt. A blade flickered. He froze in open-mouthed pain and astonishment, gaping at the throwing knife that split his hand. The blackjack finished the job before he could yell.
             The kidnapper on the roof heard the ladder creak. He was already flinging open the pigeon coop door when the blackjack flew with the speed and power of a strikeout pitcher’s best ball and smashed into the back of his head. Strong and hard as a wild boar, he shrugged off the blow, pushed into the coop, and grabbed the little girl. His stiletto glittered. He shoved the needle tip against her throat. “I kill.”
            The tall golden-haired man stood stock still with empty hands. Terrified, all Maria could think was that he had a thick mustache that she had not seen when he glided out of the saloon. It was trimmed as wonderfully as if he had just stepped from the barbershop.
            He spoke her name in a deep, baritone voice.
            Then he said, “Close your eyes very tight.”
            She trusted him and squeezed them shut. She heard the man who was crushing her shout, again, “I kill.” She felt the knife sting her skin. A gun boomed. Hot liquid splashed her face. The kidnapper fell away. She was scooped inside a strong arm and carried out of the pigeon coop.
            “You were very brave to keep your eyes closed, little lady. You can open them now.” She could feel the man’s heart pounding, thundering as if he had run very far, or had been as frightened as she. “You can open them,” he repeated softly. “Everything’s O.K.”
            They were standing on the open roof. He was wiping her face with a handkerchief,  and the pigeons were soaring into a sky that would never, ever be as blue as his eyes.
            “Who are you?”
            “Isaac Bell. Van Dorn Detective Agency.”

 
 
 
 
 
2
“Greatest engineering feat in history. Any idea what it’s going to cost, Branco?”
            “I read in-a newspaper one-hundred million doll-a, Mr. Davidson.”
             Davidson, the Contractors’ Protective Association superintendent of labor camps, laughed. “The Water Supply Board’ll spend one-hundred seventy-five million, before it’s done. Twenty million more than the Panama Canal.”
            A cold wind and a crisp sky promised an early winter in the Catskill Mountains. But the morning sun was strong and the city men stood with coats open, side by side on a scaffold atop the first stage of a gigantic dam high above a creek. Laborers swarmed the site, but roaring steam shovels and power hoists guaranteed that no one would overhear their private bargains.
            The superintendent stuck his thumbs in his vest. “Wholesome water for seven million people.” He puffed his chest and belly and beamed in the direction of far off New York City as if he were tunneling a hundred miles of Catskills Aqueduct with his own hands. “Catskills water will shoot out a tap in a fifth-floor kitchen—just by gravity.”
            “A mighty enterprise,” said Branco.
            “We gotta build it before the water famine. Immigrants are packing the city, drinking dry the Croton.”
            The valley behind them was a swirling dust bowl, mile after mile of flattened farms and villages, churches, barns, houses and uprooted trees that when dammed and filled would become the Ashokan Reservoir, the biggest in the world. Below, Esopus Creek rushed through eight-foot conduits, allowed to run free until the dam was finished. Ahead, lay the route of the Catskills Aqueduct—one-hundred miles of tunnels bigger around than train tunnels—that they would bury in trenches, drive under rivers, and blast though mountains.
            “Twice as long as the great aqueducts of the Roman Empire.”
            Antonio Branco had mastered English as a child. But he could pretend to be imperfect when it served him. “Bigga hole in ground,” he answered in the Vaudeville-comic Italian accent the American expected from a stupid immigrant to be fleeced.
            He had already paid a hefty bribe for the privilege of traveling up here to meet the superintendent. Having paid, again, in dignity, he pictured slitting the cloth half an inch above the man’s watch chain. Glide in, glide out. The body falls sixty feet and is tumbled in rapids, too mangled for a country undertaker to notice a microscopic puncture. Heart attack.
But not this morning. The stakes were high, the opportunity not to be wasted. Slaves had built Rome’s aqueducts. New Yorkers used steam shovels, dynamite and compressed air—and thousands of Italian laborers. Thousands of bellies to feed.
            “You gotta understand, Branco, you bid too late. The contracts to provision the company stores were already awarded.”
            “I hear there was difficulty, last minute.”
            “Difficulty? I’ll say there was difficulty! Damned fool got his throat slit in a whorehouse.”
            Branco made the sign of the cross. “I offer my services, again, to feed Italian laborers their kinda food.”
            “If you was to land the contract, how would you deliver? New York’s a long way off.”
            “I ship-a by Hudson River. Albany Night Line steamer to Kingston. Ulster & Delaware Railroad at Kingston to Browns Station labor camp.”
            “Hmm . . . Yup, I suppose that’s a way you could try. But why not ship it on a freighter direct from New York straight to the Ulster & Delaware dock?”
            “A freighter is possible,” Branco said noncommittally.
            “That’s how the guy who got killed was going to do it. He figured a freighter could stop at Storm King on the way and drop macaroni for the siphon squads. Plenty Eye-talian pick and shovel men digging under the river. Plenty more digging the siphon on the other side. At night you can hear ‘em playing their mandolins and accordions.”
            “Stop-a, too, for Breakneck Mountain,” said Branco. “Is-a good idea.”
            “I know a fellow with a freighter,” Davidson said casually.
            Antonio Branco’s pulse quickened. Their negotiation to provision the biggest construction job in America had begun.
 
***
 
A cobble stone crashed through the window and scattered glass on Maria Vella’s bedspread. Her mother burst into her room, screaming. Her father was right behind her, whisking her out of the bed and trying to calm her mother. Maria joined eyes with him. Then she pointed, mute and trembling, at the stone on the carpet wrapped in a piece of paper tied with string. Giuseppe Vella untied it and smoothed the paper. On it was a crude drawing of a dagger in a skull and the silhouette of a black hand.
            He read it, trembling as much with anger as fear. The pigs dared address his poor child:
 
“Dear you will tell father ransom must be paid. You are home safe like promised. Tell father be man of honor.
            The rest of the threat was aimed at him:
 Beware Father of Dear. Do not think we are dead. We mean business. Under Brooklyn Bridge by South Street. Ten thousand. PLUS extra one thousand for trouble you make us suffer. Keep your mouth shut. Your Dear is home safe. If you fail to bring money we ruin work you build.”
 
            “They still want the ransom,” he told his wife.
            “Pay it,” she sobbed. “Pay or they will never stop.”
            “No!”
            His wife became hysterical. Giuseppe Vella looked helplessly at his daughter.
            The girl said, “Go back to Signore Bell.”
            “Mr. Bell,” he shouted. He felt powerless and it made him angry. He wanted to hire the Van Dorn Detective Agency for protection. But there was risk in turning to outsiders. “You’re American. Speak American. Mr. Bell. Not Signore.”
            The child flinched from his tone. He recalled his own father, a tyrant in the house, and he hung his head. He was too modern, too American, to frighten a child. “I’m sorry, Maria. Don’t worry. I will go to Mr. Bell.”

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
3
The Knickerbocker Hotel was a hit from the day John Jacob Astor IV opened the fifteen-story Beaux-Arts building on the corner of 42rd and Broadway. The great Caruso took up permanent residence, three short blocks from the Metropolitan Opera House, as did coloratura soprano Luisa Tetrazzini, the “Florentine Nightingale,” who inspired the Knickerbocker’s chef to invent a new macaroni dish, Pollo Tetrazzini.
            Ahead of both events, months before the official opening, Joseph Van Dorn had moved his private detective agency’s New York field office into a sumptuous second floor suite at the top of the grand staircase. He negotiated a break on the rent by furnishing house detectives. Van Dorn had a theory, played out successfully at his national headquarters in Chicago’s Palmer House and at his Washington, D. C. field office in the New Willard Hotel, that lavish surroundings paid for themselves by persuading his clientele that high fees meant quality work. A rear entrance, accessible by a kitchen alley and back stairs, was available for clients loathe to traverse the most popular hotel lobby in the city to discuss private affairs, informants shopping information, and investigators in disguise.
            Isaac Bell directed Giuseppe Vella to that entrance.
            The tall detective greeted the Italian contractor warmly in the reception room. He inquired about Maria and her mother and refused, again, an offer of a monetary reward beyond the Van Dorn fee, saying good-naturedly, but firmly, “You’ve already paid your bill on time, a sterling quality in a client.”
            Bell led the Italian into the working heart of the office, the detectives’ bullpen, which resembled a modern Wall Street operation with candlestick telephones, voice tubes, clattering typewriters, a commercial graphophone and a stenographer’s transcribing device. A rapid-fire telegraph key linked the outfit by private wire to Chicago, field offices across the continent, and Washington, where the boss spent much of his time wrangling government contracts.
            Bell commandeered an empty desk and a chair for Vella and examined the Black Hand extortion letter. Half-literate threats were illustrated with crude drawings on a sheet of top quality stationery.
            Vella said, “It was tied with string around the stone they threw in the window.”
            “Do you have the string?”
            Vella pulled a strand of butcher’s twine from his pocket.
            Bell said, “I’ll look into this, immediately, and discuss it with Mr. Van Dorn.”
            “I am afraid for my family.”
            “When you telephoned, I sent men to 13th Street to guard your home.”
            Bell promised to call on Vella that afternoon at Vella’s current construction site, an excavation for the new Church of the Annunciation at 128th Street in Harlem. “By the way, if you notice you are being followed, it will only be that detective, there.” He directed Vella’s gaze across the bullpen. “Archie Abbott will look out for you.”
            The elegantly dressed, redheaded Detective Abbott looked to Vella like a Fifth Avenue dandy until he slid automatic pistols into twin shoulder holsters, stuffed his pockets with extra bullet clips, sheathed a blackjack, and loaded a shotgun shell into his gold-headed walking stick.
 
***
 
Isaac Bell took the Black Hand letter to Joseph Van Dorn’s private office. It was a corner room with an Art Nouveau rosewood desk, comfortable leather armchairs, views of the sidewalks leading to the hotel entrances, and a spyhole for inspecting visitors in the reception room.
            Van Dorn was a balding Irishman in his forties, full in the chest and fuller in the belly, with a thick beard of bright red whiskers and the gruffly amiable charm of a wealthy businessman who had prospered early in life. Enormously ambitious, he possessed the ability, rare in Bell’s experience, to enjoy his good fortune. He also had a gift for making friends, which worked to the great advantage of his detective agency. His cordial manner concealed a bear-trap swift brain and a prodigious memory for the faces and habits of criminals, whose existence he took as a personal affront.
            “I’m glad for any business,” said Van Dorn. “But why doesn’t Mr. Vella take his troubles to Joe Petrosino’s Italian Squad?”
            New York Police Detective Joseph Petrosino, a tough twenty-year veteran with an arrest and conviction record that was the envy of the department, had recently received the go ahead from Commissioner Bingham to form a special squad of Italian-speaking investigators to fight crime in the Sicilian, Neopolitan and Calabrese neighborhoods.
            “Maybe Mr. Vella knows there are only fifteen Italians in the entire New York Police Department.”
            “Petrosino’s got his work cut out for him,” Van Dorn agreed. “This ‘Black Hand’ plague is getting out of control.” He gestured at a heap of newspaper clippings that Isaac Bell had asked Research to gather for the boss. “Bombing fruit stands and burning push carts, terrorizing poor ignorant immigrants is the least of it. Now they’re tackling Italian bankers and businessmen. We’ll never know how many wealthy parents quietly ransomed their children, but I’ll bet enough to make it a booming business.”
            Bell passed Van Dorn the Black Hand letter.
            Van Dorn’s cheeks reddened with anger. “They actually address the little girl! What scum would frighten a child like this?”
            “Feel the paper.”
            “Top quality. Rag, not pulp.”
            “Remind you of anything?”
            “Same as the original ransom note, if I recall.”
            “Anything else?”
            “First class stationery.” He held it to the light. “Wonder where they got it. Why don’t you look into the watermark?”
            “I already put Research on it.”
            “So now they’re threatening his business.”
            “It’s easy to make an ‘accident’ at a construction site.”
            “Unless it’s a feint while they take another shot at his daughter.”
            “If they do,” said Bell. “They’ll run head on into Harry Warren’s gang squad. Harry’s blanketed 13th Street.”
            Van Dorn showed his teeth in a semblance of a smile. “Good—But how long can I afford to take Harry’s boys off the gangs? ‘Gophers’ and ‘Wallopers’ are running riot, and the Italians are getting bolder every day.”
            “A dedicated Van Dorn Black Hand Squad,” said Bell, “would free your top gang investigators to concentrate on the street gangs.”
            “I’ll think about it,” said Van Dorn.
            “We would be better fixed to attack the Black Hand.”
            “I said I’d think about it.”
 
***
                       
Isaac Bell strode uptown from the 125th subway station through a neighborhood rapidly urbanizing as new-built sanitariums, apartment blocks, tenements, theaters, schools and parish houses uprooted Harlem’s barnyards and shanties. He was a block from 128st Street, nearing a jagged hill of rock that Giuseppe Vella was excavating for the Church of the Annunciation, when the ground shook beneath his feet.
            He heard a tremendous explosion. The sidewalk rippled. A parish steeple swayed. Panicked nuns ran from the building, and Convent Avenue, which was surfaced with vitrified brick, started to roll like the ocean.
            Bell had survived the Great Earthquake in San Francisco only last spring, awakening suddenly in the middle of the night to see his fiancee’s living room and piano fall into the street. Now, here in Manhattan, he felt his second earthquake in four months. A hundred feet of the avenue disintegrated in front of him. Then bricks flew, propelled to the building tops by gigantic jets of water.
            It was no earthquake, but a flood.
            A river filled Convent Ave in an instant.
            There could be only one source of the raging water. The Croton Reservoir system up north in Westchester supplied New York City’s Central Park reservoir via underground mains. The explosion in Giuseppe Vella’s excavation—an enormous dynamite “overcharge,” whether by miscalculation or sabotage—had smashed them open. In an instant, the “water famine” predicted by Catskills Aqueduct champions seemed unbelievable.
            A liquid wall reared out of Convent Ave and raced down it, tearing at first-story windows and sweeping men, women and horses around the corners and into the side streets. Its speed was startling, faster than a crack passenger train. One second Isaac Bell was pulling the driver from a wagon caught in the ice-cold torrent, the next, he himself was picked up and flung into 127th Street. He battled to the surface and swam on a foaming crest that swept away shanties the full block to Amsterdam Avenue.
            There the water careened downhill, following the slope of the land south. Bell fought out of the stream and dragged himself upright on a lamp post. Firemen from a nearby station were wading in to pull people out.
            Bell shouted, “Where are the water gates?”
            “Up Amsterdam at 135th.”
            Bell charged up Amsterdam Avenue at a dead run.
            A third of a mile north of the water main break he found a sturdy Romanesque Revival brick and granite castle. The lintel above its iron doors was engraved Water Department. A structure this big had to be the main distributing point for the Westchester reservoirs. He pushed inside. Tons and tons of Croton water were surging up from a deep receiving chamber into four-foot diameter cast iron pipes. The pipes were fitted with huge valve wheels to control the outflow to the mains breached seven blocks away by the explosion.
            Bell spotted a man struggling with them. He hurtled down a steel ladder and found an exhausted middle-aged engineer desperately trying to close all four valves at once. He was gasping for breath and looked on the verge of a heart attack. “I don’t know what happened to my helper. He’s never late, never misses a day.”
            “Show me how to help!”
            “I can’t budge the gates alone. It’s a two-man job.”
            With the dynamite explosion no accident, thought Bell, but a coordinated Black Hand attack to blame Giuseppe Vella for flooding an entire neighborhood, the extortionists must have left the helper bloody in an alley.
            “This one’s frozen.”
            Isaac Bell threw his weight and muscle against the wheel and pulled with all his might. The old engineer clapped hands on it too, and they fought it together, quarter inch by quarter inch, until the gate wheel finally began to turn with a metallic screech.
            “Godforsaken Italians. I warned them again and again not to use too much dynamite. I knew this would happen.”  
 
***
 
As soon as they closed the last gate, Isaac Bell raced back to Vella’s excavation.
            The streets were littered with the corpses of drowned dogs and chickens. A dead horse was still tied in a wrecked stable. Trolleys had stalled on their tracks, shorted out by the water. House and business cellars were flooded. A hillside had washed away and fallen into a brewery, and the people who had lived in the upended shacks were poking in the mud for the remains of their possessions.
            An angry crowd was gathering at the excavation site.
            Bell shouldered through it and found Giuseppe Vella barricaded in the board shack that housed his field office.
            “Russo ran away.”
            “Who is Russo?”
            “Sante Russo. My foreman. The blaster. He was afraid those people would blame him.” Bell exchanged a quick glance with Archie Abbott, the Van Dorn shadow he had assigned to protect Vella. Abbott had managed to station himself near the door, but he was only one man and the crowd was growing loud.
            “But it wasn’t Russo’s fault.”
            “How do you know?”
            “Russo ran to me a second after the explosion. He said he found extra dynamite in the charge. He disconnected the detonator. But while he was coming to tell me, it exploded. The Black Hand reconnected the wires.”
            Policemen pushed through the crowd.
            Bell said, “Soon as the cops calm them down. I’ll escort you home.”
            The cops pounded on the door. Bell let them in.
            They had come for Vella. Accompanying them was an angry official from the city’s Combustibles Department. He revoked Vella’s explosives license for the job on the spot and swore that Vella would be fined thousands by the city. “Not only that, you reckless Wop, you’ll lose the bond you had posted in case of damage. Look what you did to the neighborhood! 125th Street is almost washed away and you flooded every cellar from here to 110th !”
            Isaac Bell issued quick orders to Archie Abbott before he accompanied Giuseppe Vella home. When they got to 13th Street, he confirmed that Harry Warren’s detectives were keeping an eye on the man’s home. Then he went to his room at the Yale Club where he changed into dry clothes and oiled his firearms. He was retrieving the soaked contents of his pockets and smoothing a damp two-dollar bill, which would dry no worse for wear, when it occurred to him what the high quality paper that the Black Hand letter had been written on reminded him of.
            “Mr. Bell,” the hall porter called though his door. “Message from your office.”
            Bell slit the envelop and read a one-word sentence written in the boss’s hand. “Report.”
 
***
 
Bell got there just as New York Police Department Captain Coligney was leaving Van Dorn’s office. They shook hands hello and Coligney said, “Take care in Washington, Joe. Good seeing you, again.”
            “Always a pleasure,” said Van Dorn. “I’ll walk you out.”
            Back in sixty seconds, he said, “Good man, Coligney. The only captain Bingham didn’t transfer when he took over—presumably recalling that President Roosevelt boomed his career back when he was Police Commissioner.”
            Van Dorn threw papers in a satchel and cast over his shoulder, “A flood, Isaac. Set off by an overcharge explosion of dynamite on the premises of our client Mr. Vella, who hired the Van Dorn Detective Agency to protect him. By any chance could we call it a horribly timed coincidental accident?”
            “Sabotage.” said Bell.
            “Are you sure?”
            “If a water department assistant engineer had not failed to show up for work at the main distribution gates, they could have stopped the water almost immediately. Archie Abbott found the poor devil in the hospital, beaten half dead. That makes two ‘horribly timed’ coincidences.”
            “Then how do we convince clients that the Van Dorn Detective Agency can protect them from the Black Hand?”
            “Same way you had Eddie Edwards drive gangs from the rail yards. Form a special squad and hit ‘em hard.”
            “We’ve already discussed your Black Hand Squad. I’m not about to commit the manpower and frankly I don’t see the profit in it.”
            “Very little profit,” Bell agreed freely. The fact was, ambition aside, Joseph Van Dorn cared far more about protecting the innocent than making a profit. All Bell had to do was remind him of it. “The Black Hand terrorize only their own countrymen. The poor folk can’t speak English, much less read it. Who can they turn to? The Irish cop who calls every man ‘Pasquale’?”
            “Forgetting,” growled Van Dorn, ‘that it wasn’t that long ago Yankee cops called us Irish ‘Paddy’—But Mr. Vella and his fellow business men speak near perfect English and read just fine.”
            “Those are the Italians we have to persuade not to forever link the Van Dorn Detective Agency to the Great Harlem Flood of 1906.”
            “I am not in a joking mood, Isaac.”
            “Neither am I, sir. Giuseppe Vella’s a decent man. He deserves better. So do his countrymen.”
            “We’ll talk next week.” Van Dorn started out the door. “Oh, one more thing. How would you feel about taking over the New York field office? Lampack’s getting old.”
            “I would not like that one bit, sir.”
            “Why not?”
            “I’m a field detective, not a manager.”
            “The heck you’re not. You’ve ramrodded plenty of squads.”
            “Squads in the field. Frankly, sir, if you won’t give me a Black Hand Squad, I would rather you appoint me Chief Investigator.”
            “I’m Chief Investigator,” said Van Dorn. “And I intend to remain Chief Investigator until I can appoint a valuable man who is sufficiently seasoned to take over—have you made any headway with that paper?”
            “I have an agent on Park Row, canvassing the printers, stationers, and ink shops.”

Most helpful customer reviews

20 of 22 people found the following review helpful.
Big dissapointment.
By Tom
I have read all of the Isaac Bell books and they seem to have steadily declined in interest and enjoyment. This particular book had far too many characters to keep track. While I enjoy the regular cast of characters that appear in each book, this particular book added far too many newbies. It appears the author wanted to write a book with too many bad guys with limited character development and multiple side plots. Concentrating on the main plot would have produced a better read. I love the turn of the century era and the vivid descriptions of the environment and social interactions. I was really looking forward to this book, but was extremely disappointed. Lastly, the ending came far too quickly for the main opponents of Bell.

11 of 12 people found the following review helpful.
A Fine Addition To The Isaac Bell Series
By Jeffrey T. Munson
Isaac Bell returns in Clive Cussler's new book, "The Gangster".

The setting is New York City, circa 1906. Italian immigrants make up a large portion of the labor work force. But an organization known as the "Black Hand" has been terrorizing the immigrants. These ruthless people use extortion, kidnapping, blackmail, and sabotage to get what they want. The immigrants eventually turn to the Van Dorn agency for protection. Isaac Bell, the Van Dorn's #1 detective, is put on the case of protecting the immigrants while at the same time tracking down the leaders of the "Black Hand". Soon, a crack squad of Van Dorn detectives is on the job watching over the immigrants.

But even Isaac Bell can't be prepared for what's in store, for the notorious "Gangster" who is in charge of the "Black Hand" has his sights set much higher than lowly immigrant workers. Events have been set in motion so that even President Teddy Roosevelt might be in danger. It's up to Isaac and his group of detectives to find out who the "Gangster" is before it's too late.

I'm a big fan of the Isaac Bell series, and I've read each book. "The Gangster" maintains the tradition of the previous books, combining historical fiction along with a strong plot and true-to-life characters. The action is fast-paced and doesn't let up until the last page. Highly recommended.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
Utterly UNsatisfying and Failed.
By Douglas B. Hermann
Cussler used to write his own books. Now even his SON writes the original Dirk Pitt tales and the various spin off series are ghost written. Even at first the ghosting wasn't that bad but now it's gone totally one dimensional. The typical early Cussler tale had two intertwined story lines combined with a historical event that grew ever more related to the twin converging plots. Now? When my son was 6 he wrote a short story. It was great for a six year old but it was, as predictable, "first this happened, then something else, then something else." No depth, no multiplicity of themes, just a point by point story. For my six year old it was TERRIFIC but offered as a 70 year old's actual work The Gangster is yet another example of Cusler's failing status. He apparently can't write his own stories anymore, which makes him too much like that other old fraud, "James Patterson" who rarely markets more than his once famous name to other's tales. So is it with Cussler. The Gangster is a superficial story with no character development and very little research. Heck, my Grandfather sailed around the world with the Great White Fleet on the Connecticut. I know more about the Connecticut than the author(s) not that it was a major plot factor. THERE WERE NO MAJOR PLOT FACTORS, just a one dimensional story line leading to the same old conclusion. Honestly, I was hoping the bad guys would have killed Isaac Bell so that this whole, now unworthy series, mostly designed to bore even MY six year old author/son, would end. Even if it doesn't kill the series, it has killed it for me. No more Isaac Bell, period. Anyone who likes this book is welcome to do so but they would be better served by reading one of Cussler's own, early Pitt adventures. As to the real author of this novel, "Justin Scott", his GOOD work ended with "The Normandie Triangle" which one SHOULD obtain, if only to see how far DOWN Scott has declilned.

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Senin, 21 Februari 2011

[F993.Ebook] Download Treason in the Blood, by Anthony Cave Brown

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Treason in the Blood, by Anthony Cave Brown

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Treason in the Blood, by Anthony Cave Brown

Brown tells the extraordinary stories of Kim Philby, a renowned double agent, and his father and mentor, Harry St. John Bridger Philby, who played a key role in establishing the modern Middle East. In this dual biography, the author includes interviews, private papers of both St. John and Kim Philby, and previously unreleased photographs and KGB memoranda--providing an intriguing account of espionage.

  • Sales Rank: #798000 in Books
  • Published on: 1994-10-27
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: .0" h x .0" w x .0" l,
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 677 pages

From Publishers Weekly
Kim Philby, called by Brown "quite possibly the greatest unhanged scoundrel in modern British history," and his father, St. John, are profiled in this dual biography. Philby pere (1885-1960), after a brilliant academic career, worked for a time in the Crown's political department in India and the Middle East, even though he despised British imperialism. He resigned from the service over financial and diplomatic irregularities in 1924. He converted to Islam and became a power in Arabia as an unofficial member of the Privy Council, but no hard evidence exists that he was a spy. Nor, despite the book's title, does Brown make that contention. Born in India, Harold Adrian Russell "Kim" Philby (1912-1987) was educated at Cambridge, where he made the acquaintance of several classmates who were to influence his life: Guy Burgess, Anthony Blunt and Donald Maclean (John Cairncross, one of the Cambridge Five, is hardly mentioned in this account). Brown discusses Philby's homosexual relationships at Cambridge and his indoctrination into the Communist Party but otherwise scants these crucial years. He details Philby's luck in being cleared for the Secret Service; his work disrupting the German intelligence prior to D-Day; his postwar service as First Secretary at the British Embassy in Washington; his part in the Burgess-Maclean escape to Russia in 1951 and his exoneration by the government. Also recounted are Philby's time as a foreign correspondent in Beirut and his defection to Moscow in 1963. Spy buffs will find Brown's (Bodyguard of Lies) perspective on Philby's post-Cambridge years interesting. Photos not seen by PW.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal
Treason in the blood? Father as role model? Philby & Son, Spies? Such Freudian stuff aside, this is as absorbing and instructive a book as history buffs and spy-story lovers will read in the current season. Brown (The Last Hero: Wild Bill Donovan, LJ 12/92) is an old hand at spy tales. Not Kipling and perhaps not even Le Carre could have devised such a father-son story as this. Kim Philby is, of course, at the core of the notorious Burgess-Maclean case; his father is less well known as an intriguer, adventurer (not to say scoundrel), and Orientalist who played a significant role in the emergence of Britain's imperial making of the modern Middle East. True, the Burgess-Maclean-Philby-Blunt story is heavily dissected in a number of books. This one brings together the Philby story as such but not with absolute finality; unanswered questions remain to tease the reader-about moles in London and about who Philby really served. But for a book that covers the modern "great game," this is one of the best.
--Henry Steck, SUNY at Cortland
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Two decades ago, Brown burst into the club of espionage historians with his popular Bodyguard of Lies, which unveiled the Allies' Ultra secret in World War II. Here he examines the career of the infamous British turncoat whom the Soviets buried with state honors. (To set the social and psychological context, Brown also folds in the life of Philby p{Š}ere, H. St. John. Kim, the younger blood, indisputably caused the deaths of hundreds of people, heinous enough, but mystery still envelops the magnitude of the damage he inflicted and the extent to which, if at all, he was protected from discovery by superiors in Britain's Secret Intelligence Service (SIS), or even by the CIA's James Angleton. While the SIS won't declassify its Philby file until 2025, Brown avails himself of the KGB's records and retired personnel still living who worked with S{™}ohnchen, their code name for their ace mole. His thorough research narrates Philby's recruitment in 1934 by Soviet agents and how they groomed him to penetrate the SIS, which occurred in 1940. The next 10 years, furnishing the bulk of this book, are crowded with Philby's wartime operations and concomitant rise through the ranks to a height (as chief of counterintelligence) that established his candidacy to become "C"--chief of the service. Unfortunately for him and the Soviets, his usefulness ended with the sensational defection in 1951 of comrade moles Burgess and MacLean--or did it? Brown is so skilled at synthesizing the minutiae of this case that spy catchers skulking about the stacks will inevitably be captivated by the story's outstanding enigmas. Gilbert Taylor

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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful.
Five Stars for Topic; Three Stars for Research Methods
By F. S. L'hoir
Despite the implications of the title, "Treason in the Blood," Anthony Cave Brown presents a generally well-balanced portrayal of the life of Kim Philby, one of the Soviet Union's Cambridge spies, who had penetrated deeply into MI6 during World War II. Mr. Brown's entertaining account adds missing pieces to the puzzle, beginning with Philby's childhood and his admiration for his usually absent father, St. John, an adventurer who had become a friend and adviser to King Ibn Saud. Brown also presents an absorbing narrative of Kim Philby's depressingly ambiguous reception in the Soviet Union after his hasty departure from Beirut in 1963. The book, which juxtaposes a portrayal of Philby's headstrong father (based upon the elder Philby's reminiscences and letters to his long-suffering wife) with Kim's youth, education, entry and career in espionage (much of the latter being familiar territory), is a 'page-turner' in spite of its 637 pages (including index).

As fascinating as the account of Philby's life in Beirut and Moscow is, however, the reader must be cautious. The author frequently relies uncritically upon evidence supplied by those whose own axes were sharply honed, as it were, since Philby's defection either made them look like fools or cast a shadow of complicity over them. The author also relies occasionally upon a juxtaposition of unrelated events, offering several interpretations, including gossip-- introduced by "it is said"--and leaving the worst interpretation (in respect to Philby's motives) to the last, where it will linger in his readers' minds (This rhetorical technique of innuendo will be recognizable to readers of the Ancient Roman authors, Suetonius and Tacitus.).

Perhaps the author's most infuriating fault, however, is the tendency to bring up a question that begs, if not an answer, at least some comment. For example, on p. 518 he notes that Guy Burgess on his deathbed ("is said to have") denounced Philby as a British (and therefore triple) agent, but that Burgess nevertheless bequeathed most of his precious library, some furniture, and a considerable amount of money to Philby. Then the author moves on to another topic, Philby's legal status in the Soviet Union. The reader would like to learn more about Burgess' startling allegations and their implications. Only on p. 589 do we discover from a former KGB agent that Philby could not possibly have been a "British plant" since, being under continual Soviet scrutiny, he had "no contact" with the British in Moscow. Whom are we to believe?

Keeping these caveats in mind, the reader will nevertheless be rewarded with a tale of espionage that rarely ceases to enthrall.

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful.
Treason In the Blood
By Michael B. Davis
Reading "Kim" Philby's auto-biography "My Silent War" (1968) was for me a little like sitting at a dinner table expecting a gourmet meal and finding nothing more than a pea. On the contrary, Anthony Cave Brown's is a fiesta; don't come to dine without bringing two mouths and a doggie bag.

I have been facinated with Kim Philby, the man, for many years. Who was he and why did he do what he did. I thought "My Silent War" was the answer. It wasn't. I was deeply disappointed. Philby fed his readers crumbs laced with deception, which is consistent with the fact that he was the embodiment of the highest level of deception, treachery and espionage in the twentieth century. No one else in the period comes close.

Anthony Cave Brown did a masterful work on Philby and the book is nothing less than "over-kill". He researched no less than 20 areas in Philby's life, from that of his paternal grandfather to the Moscow cemetary where the spy is buried. Nothing is omitted.

It was always my opinion that to understand Philby the man I would have to know Philby the child. On that score Anthony Cave Brown does not disappoint. When Philby, in his KGB-aided auto-biography refused to say where, when and how he began his life as a Soviet secret operative, Brown answered those questions masterfully.

I have read many books on Kim Philby and the Cambridge Spies. "Treason in the Blood" is THE definitive book on the life of Kim Philby. Nothing else compares, period.

9 of 12 people found the following review helpful.
The title promises more than the book delivers.
By A Customer
Brown paints engaging and detailed pictures of St. John and Kim Philby. The chapters on St. John are particularly interesting. To judge by Brown's book, the elder Philby led a more colorful, though less notorious life than his son Kim.
Brown ultimately fails to support his charge of treason against St. John Philby. The charge, implicit in the book's title, is never really followed through in the text. St. John, as described by Brown, was an active critic of British policy in Arabia, a gadfly, and ultimately an embittered nuisance. This is not the same as being a traitor, however.
The chapters on Kim contain no new blockbusters, though Brown draws his character deftly. Ultimately more interesting than Kim Philby the man, though, is Kim Philby the phenomenon.
Kim Philby continues to exert a fascination which extends far beyond his actual historical impact. His betrayal, and that of Burgess, MacLean, et al, seem to stand as emblematic of the decay of the English upper classes in the Post WWI period. While Brown does an admirable job painting his portrait of the man, he doesn't dwell on the question of why we still care about this brilliant, vain, aristocratic traitor.

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Sabtu, 12 Februari 2011

[G464.Ebook] Ebook The River, by Michael Neale

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The River, by Michael Neale

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The River, by Michael Neale

“The River is a story that will transform how you see yourself and the world.” —Andy Andrews, New York Times best-selling author of The Noticer, The Traveler’s Gift, and How Do You Kill 11 Million People?

“You were made for The River . . .”

Gabriel Clarke is mysteriously drawn to The River, a ribbon of frothy white water carving its way through steep canyons high in the Colorado Rockies. The rushing waters beckon him to experience freedom and adventure.

But something holds him back—the memory of the terrible event he witnessed on The River when he was just five years old—something no child should ever see.

Chains of fear and resentment imprison Gabriel, keeping him from discovering the treasures of The River. He remains trapped, afraid to take hold of the life awaiting him.

When he returns to The River after years away, his heart knows he is finally home. His destiny is within reach. Claiming that destiny will be the hardest—and bravest—thing he has ever done.

  • Sales Rank: #118037 in Books
  • Brand: HarperCollins Christian Pub.
  • Published on: 2012-09-17
  • Released on: 2012-09-17
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.39" h x .87" w x 5.75" l, .70 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 320 pages

From Booklist
Gabriel Clarke’s life is wholly devoted to “the River,” a stretch of rapids in the Colorado Rockies. He can’t bear to be away from it; its power is undeniable. Neale’s novel is a powerful allegory about faith in something more powerful and mysterious than oneself. Gabriel loved the River as a child, but when it took his father and he was sent to live with his mother in Kansas, he developed a fear of the water. A trip to the River as a teenager reminds him of his connection to this wild place. As he trusts the River to lead him forward, Gabriel’s life flourishes into more than he dreamed it could be while in Kansas. Neale evokes a relationship between his protagonist and nature as real as any Gabriel has with the people around him as he learns that by trusting the River to guide him, he will end up where he is meant to be. The River is not without its rough patches, enabling Neale to illustrate how it is in the toughest situations that we find our way. --Carolyn Richard

Review
“Michael Neale’s The River gently sweeps readers along like a leaf in a current as Gabriel struggles with beginning a new life after a terrible loss. Throughout this artfully crafted story is a genu ine sense of The River as a force of nature to be reckoned with, respected and learned from.” ---Bookpage Review (Bookpage Review)

“Neale’s novel is a powerful allegory about faith in something more powerful and mysterious than oneself . . . Neale evokes a relation ship between his protagonist and nature as real as any Gabriel has with the people around him as he learns that by trusting The River to guide him, he will end up where he is meant to be. The River is not without its rough patches, enabling Neale to illustrate how it is in the toughest situations that we find our way.” ---Booklist Review (Booklist Review)

“Neale’s novel is filled with likeable characters, and The River itself is one of them, suffused with mystery and power. This is a gentle, nostalgic story that should draw in many readers with its heartwarming tone.” ---CBA Retailers and Resources (CBA Retailers & Resources)

About the Author
Michael Neale is a best-selling author and Dove Award-winning songwriter. His songs have been recorded by artists such as Michael W. Smith.

Most helpful customer reviews

20 of 23 people found the following review helpful.
You Were Made for the River
By Christian writer
A Book Review: The River

Gabriel was three years old when he witnessed his father's death. His father was trying to save an inexperienced kayaker on the river.

The story flashes forward to Gabriel at age five, now living with his mother Maggie in Kansas. The small, sleepy town of Cairo is where he grew up, troubled by the demons of his memories. He was terrified to play at the pond with the boys his age.

Different people in his life helped him work through his issues on a somewhat moderate level. Mister Earl and Miss Vonda, from whom his mother Maggie rented their room through the years, were good to them. Mister Earl, his only father figure, took him fishing, which became another victory in his fear of The River.

A new schoolteacher was a positive influence in his life. Her Indian name was Great River. She painted him a picture of the river where she grew up, and wrote him a note that was signed, "Great River loves you."

After high school, Gabriel worked on Mister Earl's farm and at the Five and Dime in town. He felt restless, as if he had not found his niche, as if there were something more for which he was made.

A high school friend invited him with other friends to Colorado for a vacation on The River. It was the same River where his father had died. He did not want his friends to know his past. His insecurities abounded, but a girl named Tabitha pursued his friendship, and invited him to return for the summer to Great River Adventures, a river rafting business provided guided tours of the rapids.

Throughout his time in Colorado, a white hawk showed up repeatedly. Gabriel believed this was his father watching over him.

Gabriel did return. He found some surprises, one specific surprise that shocked and devastated him. It was the culmination of a lifetime of need and longing for answers. If he worked through this issue, he could finally overcome the huge hurt of his childhood and come to terms with the death of his father.

Thoughts concerning the writing and storyline

The book is well written and holds ones attention. It seems Gabriel is painted as an insecure, shy boy, yet as he gets older, especially during his Colorado trip after high school, he appears to have more outward confidence. In this, there seems to be a bit of a contradiction in personality of the main character, but to some it could be believable.

Thoughts on the spirituality of the book

Spiritually, this book was disappointing. There is the hint of reincarnation regarding the hawk. There is a hint toward Indian religion from the schoolteacher. God is only mentioned a couple of times throughout the entire book. One was Tabitha's reference to the stars in the night sky looking as if God poked holes in the darkness. There is no mention, let alone teaching, of God as the only One Who can help a person work through the issues and deep hurts of life. It would have been the perfect set-up to teach this lesson. But, without God, there is sadly nothing more than a secular view of dealing with life. There is a good lesson on forgiveness, and if one has the ability to see allegorically, The River could represent God. Yet the book is unclear, almost as if to leave open all options for who God is to each person, an unbiblical concept.

General recommendation

Generally, I would recommend the book as an enjoyable read, but I wouldn't recommend it if one is looking for something to encourage one's Christian walk or deepen ones knowledge of God.

9 of 9 people found the following review helpful.
Wonderful Read!
By like2read
You can read (too much) of the plot elsewhere. This wonderful, inspiring story drew me in and grabbed my soul. I laughed and cried over it. I'll read it again, and recommend it to anyone looking for good, clean inspiring fiction.

The setting of mountain streams and forests comes alive with emotions of both guilt and searching for the truth of the past. You can hear the ripples of the water rushing past, with the introduction to the magic of the river intertwined with the beauty around it. From the anger of being left behind, to the guilt of being the one who survived. You'll be drawn into the quest to understand the lives connected on the river.

Read this book! It will be time well spent. How many times can you say that?

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
Life with Purpose Often Starts with Pain
By Holly Weiss
Life can be as tumultuous as river rapids with jagged rocks.
Life can be as lonely as a dirty swamp no one visits.
Life can be as loving as a pool that gratefully accepts your fishing lure.
Life can be as gentle as a flowing stream that carries us to healing waters.

The River, debut novel by Michael Neale is all of this. Climb into your canoe and dip your paddle into the spell this book will cast over you.

Adventuresome five-year-old Gabriel Clarke loves the Colorado River until he watches his father die while trying to save someone in a kayak. Traumatized, Gabriel withdraws into his own private grief. He moves away to live with his mother in Kansas. Years pass as he deals with the scars and pain of his father's death and lonely adolescence. Will he return to the river to find some resolution?

Descriptions in the book are mystical and magical. The words Gabriel's father and grandfather wrote in their journal are poignant revelations of their feelings for The River (always capitalized in the book). Marbles Gabriel buys at a fair are described as having The River within them. Parallels between The River and God are drawn with beautiful descriptive metaphors. The reader is challenged to leave the safety of what is familiar to find the rapids of what heals.

Sometimes simplicity has the greatest impact.

The author says "The story I'm about to tell you is inspired by a collage of...happenings in my life...I believe you'll find some of your story here as well." As so often happens, one person's story helps us understand our own. To our benefit, Mr. Neale isn't afraid to bare his soul in his writing. This reviewer will watch expectantly for his next novel. Full of marvels, The Riverby Michael Neale will help you examine places in need of healing within your own heart.

Netgalley provided a digital advance review copy for my unbiased opinion.
Reviewed by Holly Weiss, author of Crestmont.

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[F166.Ebook] Fee Download Hunted: (Parallel Trilogy, Book 3), by Christine Kersey

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Hunted: (Parallel Trilogy, Book 3), by Christine Kersey

Trapped in a parallel universe where it is illegal to be overweight, sixteen-year-old Morgan Campbell is on the run with Billy Foster, the boy who helped her escape Camp Willowmoss, the Federally Assisted Thinning (F.A.T.) center where they were both held prisoner. With nowhere to go, and no resources, they fear for their lives as they hide from the Enforcers who would capture them. Morgan has six weeks until the right date, at which time she can pass back through the portal that brought her to this world. Will she be able to stay free until that date arrives, or will the Enforcers find her and lock her up, condemning her to live in this dangerous reality forever?

  • Sales Rank: #1933600 in Books
  • Published on: 2013-11-05
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .91" w x 6.00" l, 1.17 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 362 pages

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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Five Stars
By Amazon Customer
Very good. I couldn't stop reading g. Mow hi Ave gotten the other two

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Five Stars
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captivating

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Five Stars
By Amazon Customer
Awesome adventure

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[P373.Ebook] Download Marketing Strategy Masterclass, by Paul Fifield

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The very best business isn’t born out of hunches, macho tactical skirmishing or simply ‘being busy’, but is the product of careful calculation and understanding customers’ needs, wants and aspirations. Marketing Strategy Masterclass is a ‘how to’ book of marketing strategy focused on doing what our customers want us to do, how they want it done.

Included throughout are the wise words of a choice selection of history’s masters, depicted on the book’s front cover.

Aimed at professional marketing managers, business development managers and students, this real and practical masterclass is an indispensable reference for use on its own or alongside Marketing Strategy, 3rd edition, also published by Butterworth-Heinemann.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Paul Fifield has been extensively involved in strategic marketing training and education since 1980.

His professional assignments have ranged from marketing strategy development for some of the UK’s largest companies through to projects in market segmentation and branding to top level in-company strategy development programmes and workshops. He has advised clients in a wide range of industries including aviation, banking, brewing, business services, computing and software, construction, economic development, housing, hotels and catering, insurance, publishing, retailing, household appliances, telecommunications, tourism and utilities.

Paul is also Visiting Professor of Marketing at the University of Southampton and at the Coll�ge des Ing�nieurs in Paris.

  • Sales Rank: #1990134 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2008-09-10
  • Released on: 2008-09-10
  • Format: Kindle eBook

From the Back Cover
The very best business isn't born out of hunches, macho tactical skirmishing or simply 'being busy', but is the product of careful calculation and understanding customers' needs, wants and aspirations. Marketing Strategy Masterclass is a 'how to' book of marketing strategy focused on doing what our customers want us to do, how they want it done.

Included throughout are the wise words of a choice selection of history's masters, depicted on the book's front cover.

Aimed at professional marketing managers, business development managers and students, this real and practical masterclass is an indispensable reference for use on its own or alongside Marketing Strategy, 3rd edition, also published by Butterworth-Heinemann.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Paul Fifield has been extensively involved in strategic marketing training and education since 1980.

His professional assignments have ranged from marketing strategy development for some of the UK's largest companies through to projects in market segmentation and branding to top level in-company strategy development programmes and workshops. He has advised clients in a wide range of industries including aviation, banking, brewing, business services, computing and software, construction, economic development, housing, hotels and catering, insurance, publishing, retailing, household appliances, telecommunications, tourism and utilities.

Paul is also Visiting Professor of Marketing at the University of Southampton and at the Coll�ge des Ing�nieurs in Paris.

About the Author
Dr Fifield is married with three children and lives in Winchester. He holds a degree in Business Studies as well as an MBA and a PhD in Marketing Strategy, both from Cranfield University. He was elected a Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Marketing (FCIM) in 1988, an elected member of CIM Council 1999-2001 and the CIM International Board of Trustees 2002-2004.Paul was appointed Visiting Professor at Southampton University School of Management in 2006. He is currently President of the CIM Southern Region and a Fellow of the Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufacturers and Commerce (FRSA). Over thirty years of listening, watching, learning and applying academic and strategic thought to marketing has created a fertile mind which Paul brings to his customers, his writing and his teaching. He listens watches learns and applies the best of his vast knowledge to help his clients' organisations align themselves to the market they wish to serve. Only after 20 years is the market segmentation approach that was born out of his PhD thesis coming of age; and forming the foundations of some competitive and exciting new market strategies.

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Selasa, 08 Februari 2011

[W730.Ebook] Ebook Download Anti Bias Education for Young Children and Ourselves 2012, by Louise Derman-Sparks, Julie Olsen Edwards

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Anti Bias Education for Young Children and Ourselves 2012, by Louise Derman-Sparks, Julie Olsen Edwards

Bestseller! The eagerly awaited successor to the influential Anti-Bias Curriculum! Become a skilled anti-bias teacher with this volumeAEs practical guidance to confronting and eliminating barriers of prejudice, misinformation, and bias about specific aspects of personal and social identity; most importantly, find tips for helping staff and children respect each other, themselves, and all people. Over the last two decades, educators across the nation and around the world have gained a wealth of knowledge and experience in anti-bias work. The result is a richer and more nuanced articulation of what is important in anti-bias education. Individual chapters focus on culture and language, racial identity, family structures, gender identity, economic class, different abilities, holidays, and more.

  • Sales Rank: #29886 in Books
  • Brand: Unknown
  • Published on: 2010-07-31
  • Number of items: 2
  • Dimensions: 10.98" h x 1.26" w x 8.50" l, .80 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 184 pages
Features
  • Anti-Bias Education for Young Children and Ourselves

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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful.
Are we there yet?
By gin mcmillin
This is a good starting point for an Anti-biased curriculum, but I don't think it has achieved a truly unbiased perspective of culture, community and education. This book reduces certain ethnicities to nothing more than a color with little regard for their heritage, class, or culture. Other ethnic groups are regarded with complete respect and advocacy, so if you happen to have children of the respected groups in your classroom then great! If not, then keep looking for a text that will be more respectful and inclusive of all children, families, faiths, etc...

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Anti-Bias Education for Young Children and Ourselves
By Jane Jones
It seems to me that each of us is raised with bias for our own culture and it takes a conscious effort to work with young children and build a program based on being anti-bias. This is not a judgmental statement but just an observation of being a human. I found Anti-Bias Education for Young Children and Ourselves to be an excellent classroom resource to make me more aware to the differences in cultures of the children in my classrooms and how I could make them part of a new school community that accepts them and their home culture.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Met expectations
By L. M.
It served me well in my class, because I had to share it with others who could not afford a book.

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