Minggu, 05 Oktober 2014

* PDF Ebook Anonymous Sources, by Mary Louise Kelly

PDF Ebook Anonymous Sources, by Mary Louise Kelly

Just what do you do to begin reading Anonymous Sources, By Mary Louise Kelly Searching the publication that you like to check out first or discover an appealing publication Anonymous Sources, By Mary Louise Kelly that will make you would like to review? Everybody has difference with their factor of reading an e-book Anonymous Sources, By Mary Louise Kelly Actuary, checking out habit must be from earlier. Lots of people might be love to review, yet not an e-book. It's not mistake. A person will be burnt out to open the thick e-book with tiny words to read. In even more, this is the real condition. So do occur most likely with this Anonymous Sources, By Mary Louise Kelly

Anonymous Sources, by Mary Louise Kelly

Anonymous Sources, by Mary Louise Kelly



Anonymous Sources, by Mary Louise Kelly

PDF Ebook Anonymous Sources, by Mary Louise Kelly

Discover the secret to improve the quality of life by reading this Anonymous Sources, By Mary Louise Kelly This is a sort of book that you require now. Besides, it can be your preferred publication to check out after having this book Anonymous Sources, By Mary Louise Kelly Do you ask why? Well, Anonymous Sources, By Mary Louise Kelly is a publication that has different particular with others. You may not need to understand which the writer is, just how prominent the work is. As sensible word, never ever evaluate the words from that speaks, yet make the words as your good value to your life.

Reviewing Anonymous Sources, By Mary Louise Kelly is a really beneficial interest and doing that can be gone through at any time. It suggests that reviewing a book will certainly not limit your activity, will certainly not compel the moment to spend over, as well as won't invest much cash. It is a quite affordable and also reachable thing to acquire Anonymous Sources, By Mary Louise Kelly Yet, keeping that really inexpensive thing, you can get something brand-new, Anonymous Sources, By Mary Louise Kelly something that you never do and also get in your life.

A brand-new experience can be gotten by checking out a book Anonymous Sources, By Mary Louise Kelly Even that is this Anonymous Sources, By Mary Louise Kelly or various other publication collections. We provide this publication since you can locate a lot more things to urge your skill and understanding that will certainly make you better in your life. It will certainly be also valuable for the people around you. We recommend this soft documents of guide below. To understand the best ways to obtain this book Anonymous Sources, By Mary Louise Kelly, learn more right here.

You can discover the web link that our company offer in site to download Anonymous Sources, By Mary Louise Kelly By purchasing the affordable cost as well as get completed downloading and install, you have completed to the initial stage to get this Anonymous Sources, By Mary Louise Kelly It will certainly be absolutely nothing when having actually bought this book and not do anything. Read it as well as disclose it! Spend your few time to just check out some covers of web page of this publication Anonymous Sources, By Mary Louise Kelly to review. It is soft data as well as very easy to check out anywhere you are. Appreciate your new habit.

Anonymous Sources, by Mary Louise Kelly

A fast-paced international thriller in the vein of Janet Evanovich by former NPR anchor and correspondent Mary Louise Kelly, about a Pakistani terrorist’s nuclear threat to blow up the White House.

When Boston reporter Alexandra James is assigned to cover the death of Thom Carlyle, the son of a powerful Washington insider, she soon discovers the story is not as simple as it seems. The young man fell from the top of a Harvard bell tower, but did he jump…or was he pushed?

Intent on escaping the demons of her past, Alex knows how to outwork, outdrink, and outshop anyone else around. Now she is focused on what could be “the story of a lifetime”—chasing leads from Harvard Yard to the courtyards of Cambridge, England, from a clandestine rendezvous in London to the inside of a nuclear terrorist network. But when she goes to Washington, DC, for a key interview that promises to tie everything together, Alex the hunter becomes Alex the hunted. An assassin is dispatched…her laptop disappears…her phone is tapped…and she begins to grasp that Thom Carlyle may have been killed to hide a terrifying conspiracy within the White House itself.

Former NPR Intelligence correspondent Mary Louise Kelly has turned her own real-life reporting adventures into fiction with this stylish spy thriller.

  • Sales Rank: #290275 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2013-06-18
  • Released on: 2013-06-18
  • Format: Kindle eBook

Review
"Kelly has mastered the mental geographies of the journalist, the terrorist, and the spy: The competing ideals, the gritty reality, and the layers of wisdom or self-deception they employ in reconciling them. You won't put this down."--Bob Grenier, former CIA Head of Counterterrorism and former CIA Station Chief in Pakistan

"Mary Louise Kelly blends the worlds she knows so well--Harvard, Cambridge, Washington, the news room and the American intelligence community--into a fast paced thriller that is hard to put down. The atmosphere rings true on every page as she weaves a taut tale from a young man's apparent suicide to a terrorist attempt at the highest seat of American power."--Michael Hayden, former Director of the CIA

"In Mary Louise Kelly's entertaining new novel, a smart, sexy reporter wanders into the midst of a truly scary terrorist plot. In the manner of an Alfred Hitchcock thriller, Kelly's heroine has to outfox the conspirators to escape. This book is great fun, from beginning to end.""

"--David Ignatius, columnist for "The Washington Post" and author of "Bloodmoney "

"A great spy thriller..I couldn;t put it down. The plot's great and the details are delicious." ""--Joel Brenner, Former Inspector General of the National Security Agency and author of "A

"An authentic view of the media, intelligence, and terrorism that is a real page turner. Kelly gets how the national security world really works." ""--Richard A. Clarke, former White House Counterterrorism Chief and author of "The Scorpion's Gate"

"One of the most genuinely chilling plots I've ever read. A scenario that will haunt anyone who's ever read a newspaper. I couldn't put this book down." ""--Allison Leotta, author of "Speak of the Devil"

About the Author
Mary Louise Kelly has written two novels, The Bullet and Anonymous Sources, and spent two decades traveling the world as a reporter for NPR and the BBC. As an NPR correspondent covering the intelligence beat and the Pentagon, she has reported on wars, terrorism, and rising nuclear powers. A Georgia native, Kelly was educated at Harvard and at Cambridge University in England. She lives in Washington, DC, with her husband and their two children. Learn more at MaryLouiseKellyBooks.com.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Anonymous Sources
    
1
    

TUESDAY, JUNE 22

Thomas Carlyle climbed the bell tower that night without quite planning to.

He’d arrived back in Cambridge two hours before, stiff and cranky after the long flight crammed in economy class. No one was home at the house on Brattle Street. Old pizza menus were gathering dust on the floor of the front hall, and nothing was in the fridge but a withered apple and several dozen cans of his mother’s Diet Coke. So he’d dumped his bags and headed out. Fifteen minutes’ walk to the local liquor store, and then—some old homing instinct kicking in here—another ten to Eliot House.

Eliot looked the same. Perhaps the most imposing of Harvard’s dorms, it towered above the Charles River. Red brick, wide double doors, an overflowing bike rack out front. Students lounged outside the doors, smoking and giggling. Summer school must have started.

Thom caught the open door from one of them, nodded at the familiar-looking security guard, and turned right into the dining hall. It smelled of seafood—fish tacos, maybe—and frying onions. Dinner was in full swing.

Thom had eaten hundreds of dinners here, and fish tacos were among his favorites. But tonight he clutched his brown paper bag and headed straight for the far doors, through an archway, and toward the stairs marked H-ENTRY.

He took the stairs two or three at a time, up five flights. Then he cut down a hallway toward the door marked LEONARD BERNSTEIN ’39, MUSIC ROOM AND TOWER.

He dug in his jeans pocket for the key. It turned. So the lock hadn’t changed either. Two more flights, darker and narrower now. The linoleum was worn thin and stained.

When he reached the seventh floor, a small metal plaque informed him that Bernstein used to practice here in 1936. Yes, and it didn’t look like they’d bothered to redecorate it since, Thom thought to himself. He smiled. He was in decent spirits, actually, considering the jet lag, and the girl. At the top, one last door. He jiggled the lock and it swung open.

The tower room was small. Dusty. Low ceilings. Surprising, really, given the grandeur of the Eliot tower and dome from the street. In the fading light Thom took in the grand piano hulking in the middle of the room. He’d always wondered how the hell they’d hauled it up here.

But the reason he’d come was for the windows. Two huge and perfectly circular windows, each maybe six feet across, one framing each end of the room. The right one was long since painted shut, if it had ever opened. But the left one bore two ancient-looking brass latches. Thom unhooked them and then remembered to kick at the bottom panes, where the paint always stuck a bit. And there it was. The whole window spun open on creaky hinges. He wedged his paper bag into the crack to keep the breeze from slamming it shut again, then hooked a leg over, lowered himself onto the sill, and peered down across the steep slate roof.

Senior year, he and his roommate, Joe, sometimes crawled right out across the roof, inching along until they could straddle the dormer windows. They would knock back a few beers and watch the girls crossing the courtyard, their laughter and teasing voices floating up from far below.

Now he looked down at the Charles River, curving toward Boston and glowing golden at this hour. On the far bank rose the dome of Harvard Business School. Thom’s destiny, the way things were going. He shook the thought from his head and cracked open one of the bottles he’d purchased, walking here through Harvard Square. A thick, syrupy oatmeal stout. Not exactly the thing for this summer weather. But studying in England this past year, he’d lost his taste for the watery American lager that had been the staple of his weekends here in Eliot House.

Thom took another sip and watched the boats gliding along the Charles. Lord knew how many hours he himself had logged on this river. By the time he made varsity crew, the boathouse had felt more central to his college experience than any library, and the blisters across his hands had hardened like tiny stones. A sculler flitted past, then an eight-man crew. Was that Boston University? But why would they be practicing so late, and on summer break at that?

He squinted and craned forward, trying to make out what colors were painted on the oars. It was at that moment that hands reached from the shadows behind him. The blow landed at the bottom of his skull. A crack of wood against bone. There was a moment of perfect silence, before Thom swung his strong arms, clawing behind him. But the foot was already on his back. One kick, but hard enough to launch him off the sill and onto the roof ten feet down.

He crashed into the pointed tip of a dormer window and rolled, grabbing for a gutter, a ledge, anything. There was nothing, and he fell, wide-eyed, into the gathering twilight below.

Most helpful customer reviews

26 of 28 people found the following review helpful.
Excellent read- spys, sex, international intrigue, and interesting characters.
By Dan D.
I heard the author being interviewed on the morning radio (NPR)three days ago and bought the book on a whim. The timing was excellent as I had just finished a book. That afternoon on my lunch break at work, I sat in my office completely intrigued with the story. The story is complex yet easy to follow, interesting, exciting, and the characters are full of imaginable detail. I am confident that one day Alexander and James will be ever so glad to discover that their mother has changed course in her career as a writer. Readers of the novel will have to read all the way to the end to understand why the main character Alexandra James makes such a great reporter and her next story will be fiction and written closer to home.

As a bit of a recommendation and review of the book- let me put it this way... When is the sequel? I'm dying to see what Ms. James gets herself into next.

19 of 20 people found the following review helpful.
Recommended, with reservations
By Editoria
At one point in this book one of the bad guys says to our heroine, "You have been stupid, so stupid, from the beginning." I'm afraid I had to agree. It was a source of frustration that the otherwise intelligent Alexandra James failed more than once to see things that had to be obvious to most readers. She was young, yes, but how could she possibly have been that clueless?

The other problem I had could have (and should have) been fixed by the editor. In the first sentence of Chapter 2, Alex mentions that she was waiting, as usual, for her friend Jess. A little later in the book she says she's going to have to apologize to Jess. At some point a couple of pages are devoted to Jess letting herself into Alex's apartment to borrow a pair of shoes. And that was the last we hear about Jess. I never did figure out what she was doing in the book. Nor did I determine why a tragic event in Alex's past figured so prominently in the story.

But I liked the book. I really did. It is definitely a page turner, and I read it quickly. The author has a wonderful sense of humor, and I laughed out loud in several places. If there's a sequel, I hope the author brings back the enchanting Lucien. And Hyde. I want to hear them speak again. Mary Louise Kelly is a genius with dialogue.

24 of 28 people found the following review helpful.
Anonymous Sources by Mary Louise Kelly - Book Review
By Ted Lehmann
I'm old enough to remember Mike Hammer ruthlessly gunning down bad guys and killing evil women with equal glee. Then came the somewhat more sensitive male detectives who work at conquering their problems while solving crimes. Slowly, as times have changed, the images of crime fiction heroes have changed, too. Now, we see the emergence of a new kind of woman detective. No longer are we entertained by tea and crumpets served by little old ladies solving crimes, but contemporary career women who use the assets they have to overcome evil in interesting and arresting situations filled with all the blood coursing excitement of a tight plot fraught with all the difficulties the genre presents. Anonymous Sources by Mary Louse Kelley (Gallery Books, June 18, 2013, 352 pages) does the job, presenting an attractive and sexy hero who's tough and spunky enough to accomplish her task while complex enough to remain interesting and unpredictable throughout. Mary Louise Kelly, in her first novel, appears to be a comer worth watching. Read the rest of the review on my blog. Please consider purchasing this title through the Amazon portal there.

See all 201 customer reviews...

Anonymous Sources, by Mary Louise Kelly PDF
Anonymous Sources, by Mary Louise Kelly EPub
Anonymous Sources, by Mary Louise Kelly Doc
Anonymous Sources, by Mary Louise Kelly iBooks
Anonymous Sources, by Mary Louise Kelly rtf
Anonymous Sources, by Mary Louise Kelly Mobipocket
Anonymous Sources, by Mary Louise Kelly Kindle

* PDF Ebook Anonymous Sources, by Mary Louise Kelly Doc

* PDF Ebook Anonymous Sources, by Mary Louise Kelly Doc

* PDF Ebook Anonymous Sources, by Mary Louise Kelly Doc
* PDF Ebook Anonymous Sources, by Mary Louise Kelly Doc

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar