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Go to Memphis and be a Bond Daddy. For a generation of Southern boys, it was a mantra, a way to make more money that their fathers ever could. For Billy Pitt, it was the answer to all his prayers. Six years and 60 million in sub-prime debt later, Billy Pitt is divorced, suffering an unrequited love for Melissa Lee, his career is in jeopardy and his soul is condemned to hell for all eternity. Billy Pitt is faced with a hard question: how to keep the party going for One Last Hour? So sets the stage for Richard Murff's second novel. It is a world he knows well and a language he speaks fluently.
Kennedy got the missiles out of Cuba, but that was only half the job. Nearly 50 years on, an ex-KGB quartermaster is sitting on bunker of forgotten uranium in the Cuban mountains. His plan is simple: unload his aging but deadly stockpile, and go to earth. The beautiful but forgettable Ugly Sue has one simple mission: to liquidate Mickey Boy before he can close the deal. Yavi Omari is hoping his religious zeal will soon end his pathetic life and send him into the arms of Allah and 72 dark-eyed virgins. Archie Gilmur just about to learn the hard way that a global telecommunications giant isn't buying up huge chunks of Panamanian jungle just to bring folks together.
You might think that Machiavelli's "The Prince", the definitive guide to becoming a 16th century despot has no place in the modern world. If you are running for office, occupying a foreign country, planning an hostile merger, or have a job, this study of the realpolitik is an indispensable as it was 500 years ago. The modern relevance of this ancient text is spelled out in a through and hilariously to-the--point introduction.
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