SOPDS
SIMPLE OPDS CATALOG
Life should be filled with books that are filled with life.
Confirm the deletion of the book to your bookshelf.

Delete    Cancel

A Scourge of Vipers     
Book title: A Scourge of Vipers
Authors: DeSilva Bruce
Genres: Детективы
File: fb2-605289-609999.zip/605567.fb2
File size: 669.6 KB
Language: Английский
Read online
Download:
fb2
fb2+zip
epub
mobi

"Bruce deSilva takes everything we love about the classic hard-boiled detective novel and turns it into a story that's fresh, contemporary, yet timeless." – Joseph Finder To solve Rhode Island's budget crisis, the state's colorful governor, Attila the Nun, wants to legalize sports gambling, but her plan has unexpected consequences. Organized crime, professional sports leagues, and others who have a lot to lose – or gain – if gambling is made legal flood the state with money to buy the votes of state legislators. Liam Mulligan, investigative reporter for The Providence Dispatch, wants to investigate, but his bottom-feeding corporate bosses at the dying newspaper have no interest in serious reporting. So Mulligan goes rogue, digging into the story on his own time. When a powerful state legislator turns up dead, an out-of-state bag man gets shot, and his cash-stuffed briefcase goes missing, Mulligan finds himself the target of shadowy forces who seek to derail his investigation by destroying his career, his reputation, and perhaps even his life. Bruce DeSilva's A Scourge of Vipers is at once a suspenseful crime story and a serious exploration of the hypocrisy surrounding sports gambling and the corrupting influence of big money on politics

BOOKSHELF
Bookshelf is available only SimpleOPDS Catalog mode with activated user authorization.
STATISTICS

This сatalog contains: 537400 books, 149015 authors, 845 genres and 45152 series.

Last collection scan date: Sept. 16, 2025, 12:13 a.m.

RANDOM BOOK

After the Tall Timber

What is really going on here? For decades Renata Adler has been asking and answering this question with unmatched urgency. In her essays and long-form journalism, she has captured the cultural zeitgeist, distrusted the accepted wisdom, and written stories that would otherwise go untold. As a staff writer at The New Yorker from 1963 to 2001, Adler reported on civil rights from Selma, Alabama; on...