From Amazon.com
If you need a good business thriller to keep your mind off the stock market, you can't do much better than this one from Stephen Frey, former Wall Street insider and author of two previous barn burners,
The Takeover and
The Vulture Fund, both available in paperback.
The Inner Sanctum pits smart, ambitious, underpaid IRS agent Jesse Hayes against smart, ambitious, overpaid portfolio fund manager David Mitchell in a story about corporate greed and political corruption that reads like a cover of
Time or
Newsweek.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Library Journal
After her boss dies suddenly, IRS agent Jesse Hayes receives a mysterious, time-delayed E-mail message from him warning her of a powerful conspiracy involving senatorial candidate Elbridge Coleman. A wealthy businessman with ties to the military, Coleman is at the heart of some nasty business. Now Hayes is the only person with the information to derail him, but a dangerous killer is on her trail. Meanwhile, David Mitchell, who works for a Baltimore-based investment firm, hopes to insure that a company he has backed wins a huge government defense contract. He and Jesse meet, are attracted, and then seemingly wind up on opposite sides as the deadly conspiracy plays itself out. Readers looking for a fast-paced financial thriller will enjoy the slick, albeit facile, plot and writing from the best-selling Frey (The Vulture Fund, Dutton, 1996). While entertaining, this book breaks no new ground in the thriller game. Suitable for pop fiction collections.
-?Dean James, formerly with Houston Acad. of Medicine/Texas Medical Ctr. Lib.Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.