The breakout novel that puts S. Andrew Swann in the technothriller ranks of Clancy, Coonts, and Cussler!
Veteran writer S. Andrew Swann turns his talents to a mainstream technothriller that combines the authentic detail of Tom Clancy, the global intrigue of Jack Higgins, and the sheer adventure of Clive Cussler. Gideon Malcolm was a Washington, D. C., cop who stumbled into the midst of a high-level sting operation gone wrong and nearly paid with his life. Now he wants answers. But the government wants him to forget the whole thing. Yet Gideon wasn't about to give up, and what began with a stolen supercomputer soon led him on the trail of a missing woman, Dr. Zimmerman—and into the heart of a conspiracy so vast, so devastating, that the entire world would be caught up in its power!
Readers beware: you come to this way beyond its expiration date. Written in 2000, its premise is based on a supercomputer (remember those?) and a terrorist group similar to Al Qaeda but called something else. Oh -- and references to the World Trade Center bombing that was vastly eclipsed by what happened a few years later. So everything is dated, which is only part of the problem. The plot is way too complex, with far too many moving parts, even though it is fairly well-written. I've never heard of the author (not an untalented man) and that probably is to be expected.