The patriot threat /
by Berry, Steve [author.].
Material type:![materialTypeLabel](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
Item type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due |
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Ed & Hazel Richmond Pub Library | Fiction | FM Ber (Browse shelf) | Available |
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FM Ber The Charlemagne pursuit : | FM Ber The Jefferson key : | FM Ber The Columbus affair : | FM Ber The patriot threat / | FM Blo The burglar who liked to quote Kipling : | FM Blo The burglar who studied Spinoza / | FM Blo The burglar who thought he was Bogart : |
Library Journal, February 01, 2015
Publishers Weekly, January 26, 2015
Kirkus Reviews, January 15, 2015
Booklist, January 01, 2015
"The 16th Amendment to the Constitution legalized federal income tax, but what if there were problems with the 1913 ratification of that amendment? Problems that call into question decades of tax collecting, and could even bring down the US economy. There is a surprising truth to this possibility a truth wholly entertained by Steve Berry, a top-ten New York Times bestselling writer, in his new thriller, The Patriot Threat. His protagonist, Cotton Malone, once a member of an elite intelligence division within the Justice Department known as the Magellan Billet, is now retired. But when his former boss, Stephanie Nelle, asks him to track a rogue North Korean who may have acquired some top secret Treasury Department files the kind that could bring the United States to its knees. Malone is vaulted into a harrowing twenty-four-hour chase that begins on the water in Venice and ends in the remote highlands of Croatia. With appearances by Franklin Roosevelt, Andrew Mellon, and a curious painting that still hangs in the National Gallery of Art, Steve Berry's trademark mix of history and suspense is 90% fact and 10% exciting speculation, a provocative thriller that poses a dangerous question. What if the federal income tax is illegal?"--Publisher.
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