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White House

AUTHOR: David Hagberg
ISBN: 0812550641

SHORT DESCRIPTION: A terrorist bomb explodes at a Georgetown restaurant, killing CIA operative Kirk McGarvey's girlfriend and wounding his daughter. McGarvey seeks vengeance while struggling with an escalating crisis in the Far East, where a mysterious underground...

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         Editorial Review

White House
- Book Review,
by David Hagberg


From Publishers Weekly
A nuclear showdown in the Far East becomes the backdrop for Hagberg's latest installment in the Kirk McGarvey series, which begins when the CIA operative is nearly wiped out by a terrorist bomb while dining in a Georgetown restaurant. The bomb does kill McGarvey's erstwhile girlfriend and severely injures his daughter. He soon discovers that the purpose of the attack was to keep him from accepting a promotion to become the head of CIA operations. As McGarvey assumes his new duties, an underground nuclear explosion off the coast of the Korean peninsula becomes the focal point of a confrontation between China, Japan and North Korea, and McGarvey quickly traces an intelligence leak to a wealthy Asian businessman who exerts a powerful influence over a variety of high-powered legislators and the U.S. president himself. As an American nuclear submarine battles to keep the potential combatants in the Far East apart, the focus of the intrigue shifts from the North Koreans to the president and finally to Japan when McGarvey discovers some suspicious behavior surrounding a major Japanese space launch that eventually results in the murder of a U.S. astronaut. Hagberg's premise of a potential nuclear meltdown is frighteningly plausible, and he deftly juggles several well-researched subplots involving the commander of the American submarine, the American astronauts assigned to the space mission and the hyperactively heroic McGarvey, who must defend his family from another attack before embarking on a one-man mission to stop the launch. While his climactic mission stretches credibility to the breaking point, Hagberg delivers a powerful payload of action, suspense and political intrigue in the meantime. (Aug.) Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Booklist
This is Hagberg's eighth novel about superspy Kirk McGarvey. The fun begins with two seemingly unrelated incidents. The first is the destruction of a North Korean nuclear weapon site by Japanese commandos. The second is an attempt to murder McGarvey by bombing a Georgetown restaurant. Kirk's French girlfriend is killed and his daughter wounded in the explosion. With Washington worried about North Korea, Japan, and China--who's likely to do what to whom, when and how?--McGarvey puts aside his desire to resign from the CIA and instead takes on the job of deputy director of operations. Guided by a computer whiz who lives on Twinkies, he deals with a president preoccupied with campaign funds, an Asian money man who has slept in the Lincoln bedroom, and an assortment of villains on both sides of the globe. A nifty nonstop-action tale that deserves comparison with Clancy, Cussler, and the other lords of technological mayhem. Budd Arthur


From Kirkus Reviews
A touch of Japan-bashing, a smidgen of nuke-scarifying, and a max of superheated swashbucklingall in this formulaic Hagberg technothriller (Assassin, 1997, etc.). The Japanese are up to something inscrutable. On the surface, its just an innocent satellite launch, a joint effort with the US, but the CIA doesn't buy that for a minute. In the first place, the launch is connected somehow to a mysterious nuclear explosion set off by North Korea. More importantly, its connected to a certain Joseph Lee, an international businessman of the distinctly sinister variety. This Lee, rich, ruthless, at home in the corridors of powerWhite House corridors among themregards series hero Kirk McGarvey with a jaundiced eye. Smart, incredibly tough, and endlessly resourceful, McGarvey stands in Lees way. Rid himself of McGarveywhose strength is as the strength of Ramboand nothing can thwart his complex geopolitical ambitions, he reasons. Thugs in Lees employ toss a bomb into a restaurant where McGarvey, his lover, and his daughter are dining. Bad mistake. Though the lover perishes and the daughter is hurt, the target escapes. And is enraged. Vowing vengeance, McGarvey goes after his enemies as unswervingly as a killer bee. He tracks them down, takes them on, and though they pit armies and arsenals against him, foils their plans. The ill-intentioned launching never happens. The nefarious Lee is null and voided. America's best-ever master spy saves the world. Even if he's twice as good as his file suggests, says a gun-toting terrorist at one point, clearly whistling in the dark, he cannot defeat four to one odds. Famous last words. The good news is that it moves fast. Since its all comic-book stuff, it doesn't drag, but it doesn't grab either. -- Copyright ©1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.


Review
"Hagberg is a major find."--Dean Koontz

"Hagberg delivers a powerful payload of action, suspense, and political intrigue."--Publishers Weekly



Review
"Hagberg is a major find."--Dean Koontz

"Hagberg delivers a powerful payload of action, suspense, and political intrigue."--Publishers Weekly



Book Description
On American soil, a terrorist bomb explodes at a Georgetown restaurant, killing CIA operative Kirk MGarvey's girlfriend and wounding his daughter. Now Mcgarvey seeks vengeance while at the same time struggling with the growing crisis in the Far East where a mysterious underground nuclear explosion has destroyed a power station off the coast of North Korea.

From the corridors of power in Washington to the Japanese space launch center at Tanegashima, White House tells a gripping story of suspense about one man's race to sabotage a cunning terrorist operation before it eliminates the White House-- and everyone he loves.



About the Author
David Hagberg is the U. S. A. Today bestselling author of Kill Zone, High Flight, and more than forty other novels written under his own name and also as Sean Flannery. He lives in Vero Beach, Florida.



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         Book Review

White House
- Book Reviews,
by David Hagberg

White House

FROM THE PUBLISHER

In Washington, ex-CIA operative Kirk McGarvey is lured back into the field when the agency offers him a job as Deputy Director of Operations, the third most powerful position in America's intelligence community. But within hours of his appointment, a terrorist bomb explodes at a Georgetown restaurant, killing his French girlfriend and wounding his daughter. The bomb was meant for him, and the terrorists have made a fatal mistake - attacking McGarvey's family.. "At the same time McGarvey must struggle with an escalating crisis in the Far East. When a mysterious underground nuclear explosion destroys a power station off the coast of North Korea, U.S. intelligence fears the worst. Because if Kim Jong Il, North Korea's controversial strongman, has nuclear weapons, he may just be crazy enough to use them.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

A nuclear showdown in the Far East becomes the backdrop for Hagberg's latest installment in the Kirk McGarvey series, which begins when the CIA operative is nearly wiped out by a terrorist bomb while dining in a Georgetown restaurant. The bomb does kill McGarvey's erstwhile girlfriend and severely injures his daughter. He soon discovers that the purpose of the attack was to keep him from accepting a promotion to become the head of CIA operations. As McGarvey assumes his new duties, an underground nuclear explosion off the coast of the Korean peninsula becomes the focal point of a confrontation between China, Japan and North Korea, and McGarvey quickly traces an intelligence leak to a wealthy Asian businessman who exerts a powerful influence over a variety of high-powered legislators and the U.S. president himself. As an American nuclear submarine battles to keep the potential combatants in the Far East apart, the focus of the intrigue shifts from the North Koreans to the president and finally to Japan when McGarvey discovers some suspicious behavior surrounding a major Japanese space launch that eventually results in the murder of a U.S. astronaut. Hagberg's premise of a potential nuclear meltdown is frighteningly plausible, and he deftly juggles several well-researched subplots involving the commander of the American submarine, the American astronauts assigned to the space mission and the hyperactively heroic McGarvey, who must defend his family from another attack before embarking on a one-man mission to stop the launch. While his climactic mission stretches credibility to the breaking point, Hagberg delivers a powerful payload of action, suspense and political intrigue in the meantime. (Aug.) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

A touch of Japan-bashing, a smidgen of nuke-scarifying, and a max of superheated swashbuckling—all in this formulaic Hagberg technothriller (Assassin, 1997, etc.). The Japanese are up to something inscrutable. On the surface, it's just an innocent satellite launch, a joint effort with the US, but the CIA doesn't buy that for a minute. In the first place, the launch is connected somehow to a mysterious nuclear explosion set off by North Korea. More importantly, it's connected to a certain Joseph Lee, an international businessman of the distinctly sinister variety. This Lee, rich, ruthless, at home in the corridors of power—White House corridors among them—regards series hero Kirk McGarvey with a jaundiced eye. Smart, incredibly tough, and endlessly resourceful, McGarvey stands in Lee's way. Rid himself of McGarvey—whose strength is as the strength of Rambo—and nothing can thwart his complex geopolitical ambitions, he reasons. Thugs in Lee's employ toss a bomb into a restaurant where McGarvey, his lover, and his daughter are dining. Bad mistake. Though the lover perishes and the daughter is hurt, the target escapes. And is enraged. Vowing vengeance, McGarvey goes after his enemies as unswervingly as a killer bee. He tracks them down, takes them on, and though they pit armies and arsenals against him, foils their plans. The ill-intentioned launching never happens. The nefarious Lee is null and voided. America's best-ever master spy saves the world. "Even if he's twice as good as his file suggests," says a gun-toting terrorist at one point, clearly whistling in the dark, "he cannot defeat four to one odds." Famous last words. The good news is that it moves fast.Since it's all comic-book stuff, it doesn't drag, but it doesn't grab either.




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