Sunday, November 13, 2011

Stephen Coonts' Deep Black: Conspiracy Review

Stephen Coonts' Deep Black: Conspiracy
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A Secret Service agent is dead of an apparent suicide. A Presidential
candidate Senator Gideon McSweeney narrowly misses being assassinated at
a public event. Due to threatening e-mails NSA Desk Three(Deep Black) is
able to find a link to the Republic of Vietnam. It is at first suspected
that "Infinite Burn" a plan for Vietnam to assassinate American leaders
has been launched. Charlie Dean and Tommy Karr travel to Vietnam to do
an investigation. Dean travels to Quang Nam to confront Phuc Dinh who
Dean thought he had sucessfully assassinated 30 years before. Another
person of suspicion is Pine Plains police chief Christopher Ball. It makes
for an interesting read for Deep Black to try and unravel this mystery.
There are many shocking twists and turns for the true villains to be
exposed. The 30 year old conspiracy is just as shocking. This is one of
the better "Deep Black" books that has been written. Be sure not to miss this one.

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A Secret Service agent is dead, an apparent suicide. A presidential candidate narrowly escapes an assassin's bullet. And Desk Three, a convert branch of the NSA, is searching for a chilling connection deep inside The Republic of Vietnam.Once, Charlie Dean was a Marine sniper in Quang Nam Province. Today he's a Deep Black operator, returning to Vietnam to find the source of some threatening e-mails. Instead, he comes face to face with a man he had once hunted down…and thought he had killed.Back in the U.S., Deep Black agent Lia DeFrancesca has uncovered the trail of a killer in Dean's path. Now, with every asset, weapon, bug and high-tech magic wand Desk Three can wave, the agents enter a terrifying global race against time. Because ghosts of the past have risen to life…to strike a death blow into the heart of the U.S.A.

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