Wednesday, May 31, 2017

THE PHOENIX YEAR, novel that feels more like an intelligence dossier



THE PHOENIX YEAR
DAVID L. BLOND

Wattle Publishing
$21.99 trade paper, available now

Rating: 3.5* of five

The Publisher Says: “… from out of the fire, would rise a new order, like the legend of the phoenix. There would emerge a new world, a new super economy…”

So starts a sequence of events destined to rock world economies to their very core. On the 50th anniversary of their induction into the Society of the Phoenix, a group of billionaires is about to change the world dramatically, with devastating effect.

Overseen by the reclusive Heinrich Von Kleise, the Society has hatched an audacious plan to subvert world economies, by using and abusing some of the world’s wealthiest businessmen and their families; in some cases, holding them literally to ransom, or worse.

Michael Ross, an economic advisor to the US President, Ben Masters, a disgraced property tycoon, Natalya Avramowitz, a Russian economist and spy, and “Kim” a CIA Agent, find themselves at the center of this plot, involving inside trading, sex slavery, and political corruption.

As the world careens towards financial Armageddon, can Michael, Natalya and Kim prevent global disintegration, or are the world’s financial institutions fated to implode?

The Phoenix Year by David L. Blond is a gripping novel, encompassing many of the financial crises that have hit the headlines in the past decade. The author has skillfully woven these together to create an action-packed conspiracy thriller.

My Review: The Publisher refers to this book as "gripping"...I don't necessarily agree with that, but I finished the book in two sittings...and it's not short. I liked the policy stuff because I'm nerdy that way. I wasn't convinced it's all fiction, either. We've got ample circumstantial evidence to support the existence of a coordinated attack on world economies. I'm therefore inclined to offer an extra star over the generally clunky prose's merited two-and-a-half. This is more of an "eat-your-spinach" read than a sheer delight. It is definitely worth listening to!

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.