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Sphere of Influence
  

Sphere of Influence [Large Print] (Paperback)

by Kyle Mills (Author) "HE'D been there for more than an hour, but the dirt loosened by his helicopter's downdraft continued to swirl around him in the aimless breeze..." (more)
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (30 customer reviews)

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From Publishers Weekly

New York Times bestseller Mills (Burn Factor) returns with his fifth novel, featuring brilliant FBI tough guy Mark Beamon, who is investigating a terrorist threat linked to a global conspiracy. Killing time on a dead-end assignment while the Bureau plans his downfall, Beamon is thrown together with his former colleague Laura Vilechi when a videotape is delivered to the American media, indicating that Al Qaeda has smuggled a rocket launcher into the U.S. Their threat to use it against civilian targets has thrown the country into a panic, with people afraid to leave their homes. Meanwhile, Chet Michaels, one of Beamon's former trainees, now deep undercover in pursuit of a psychotic Mafioso, is nervously watching drug deals being made with shadowy Afghans. Looming behind all of this is a CIA deal with the devil (in the form of Christian Volkov, an international criminal mastermind), in which the U.S. government attempts to use organized crime figures as a proxy underworld army in the so-called war on terror. This thriller features real people and groups drawn from daily news headlines, playing on the anxieties of the American public-from the heroin trade to terrorism (and the connections between the two). But Mills avoids cynical exploitation, offering up human characters and a story that, despite some implausible subplots and heavy-handed editorializing, remains engrossing and affecting.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Library Journal

Reeled in from a dead-end job, outspoken FBI agent Mark Beamon is sent undercover to investigate a terrorist cell with access to modern missile technologyand promptly sees a fellow agent get murdered. From the author of The Burn Factor.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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4.0étoiles sur 5 Well Worth The Read: Sphere of Influence by Kyle Mills, Mars 24 2004
This review is from: Sphere Of Influence (Hardcover)
Rogue elements or individuals within America's governmental law enforcement agencies have always been a hallmark of many thriller and mystery novelists. For example, Robert Ludlum and Tom Clancy, just to name two, have often used rogue CIA operatives as part of their many novels and to great effect. In the past, the Cold War provided the backdrop for such operations. With the theoretical end of the Cold War, there was concern that like black and white movies, the times had passed such topics by. Now, in what is sure to be a flood of such novels, Muslim fanaticism and the global war on terror are replacing the Cold War as a fictional backdrop. Rogue elements in the CIA in fiction along with the occasional glimpses through Congressional hearings in real life makes this novel highly believable.

Somewhere in America, an Al-Queada terrorist cell has a rocket launcher and some missiles for it. With the death of Osama Bin Laden (treated as fact), Al-Queada has reconstituted itself under new leadership and become a smaller, more efficient terrorist organization. They have learned the ultimate lesson of the terrorist attacks-America was hurt much worse by the economic impact of such actions than by the casualty toll. The terrorists release videotape to the major networks detailing their threat to fire missiles somewhere in the United States. They promise to attack schools, shopping centers, etc. to make the point again that one is ever safe.

Panic grips the nation exacerbated by the twenty four hour seven day a week cable news coverage of the threat. Schools, business, shopping centers, etc. begin to close as the nation's commerce grinds to a halt. For Mark Beamon, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI's Phoenix Office, the situation is doubly frustrating. Not only is this not his case and that has been made clear by his superiors, he has massive personal problems of his own.

Mark is less than happy with his current role in the FBI. As detailed in the earlier three novels of this series character, Mark Beamon is a loner and does not play well with others. He certainly does not really fit into the model of what an agent is in the currently politically correct version of today's FBI. He eschews office politics and relies on results. About to be fired, arrested and imprisoned for his previous actions, the incoming President saved him from himself. Thanks to having a friend on the White House Staff, he was instead sent to dead-end his career in charge of the Phoenix office. Management is not his thing and as the ongoing office audit makes clear, his talents are better suited to working cases, not people.

Because of his connections to other agents from past cases, Mark begins to get separate but important pieces of information that he is not supposed to have access to. He sees a totally different track to the case and his ideas conflict with his superior's public statements. He begins to suspect that the terrorists have links to organized crime and wonders why the CIA isn't telling all they know. Soon his suspicions prove correct as a fellow agent and long time friend is executed while both are on an undercover operation. Allowed to survive, Mark Beamon begins to work the case from deep undercover using any resources and methods necessary to find not only the rocket launcher but also those responsible inside and outside of government.

This is an extremely complicated novel, which in my summary, I have failed to do justice to. As the really good novels do, it works on many levels with puzzles within puzzles. The players are extremely complicated and multi-dimensional and there are a large number of plot twists. The action is frequently intense and the novel moves forward at a steady clip.

One also has to wonder just how much of this novel is actual fact and not conjecture. Tom Clancy took an active involvement in this author's career from the early stages including helping him get his first novel published titled "Rising Phoenix." Tom Clancy has long been known for his access to highly classified government information and sources and is said to have introduced Kyle Mills to many of the same information resources. One often gets the feeling in reading his novels that Kyle Mills barely fictionalizes many important details. If true in this case, he is providing some very interesting material on the war in terrorism in this very enjoyable thriller.

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3.0étoiles sur 5 Average thriller at best, Mars 22 2004
This review is from: Sphere Of Influence (Paperback)
The Tom Clancy quote on the back cover reads, "Kyle Mills is fast becoming the new master of gripping and intelligent page turners."

Gripping and intelligent is where the wheels start to come off on this book. The plot comes down to the threat of a rocket launcher and 3 or 4 missile s smuggled into the United States via Mexico and the vague threat that these might have biological or chemical warheads. This situation puts the public in a deep panic and the economy in a tailspin. Furthermore, the rockets and the launcher are held by separate terrorist cells, and have to come together so that they can launch a rocket with a 12 mile range at a civilian target.

I guess the threat isn't all that credible in my mind. Saddam proved you don't need a fancy launching platform to send SCUD missiles into Israel so why do these terrorist need one? The bad guys never pull off a strike - so why is there such a tremendous panic?

Secondly, the plot has a whole raft of interesting characters. You have Mark Beamon (Mills' burnt FBI agent), a Russian gangster, a CIA nincompoop, a New York wiseguy, and your stock-in-trade fanatical terrorist. There is a lot of potential here, maybe enough for a couple of books.

Thirdly, Beamon goes so far out on a legal limb that the ending defies belief.

With all that said, Mills is a talented writer. The dialogue and story moves along. I just think he needs to recognize the Mark Beamon character has run its course and move on. He has shown us that he can be brilliant, but I think he needs new material.

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4.0étoiles sur 5 Fast moving and action packed, Fév 20 2004
Par Patrick Stott (Rolleston, Canterbury, New Zealand) - Voir tous mes commentaires
This review is from: Sphere Of Influence (Paperback)
So you think Bill Gates is the richest man in the world? Perhaps he's gathered the world's largest legitimate fortune, but how do we know that there are not shadowy underworld figures whose wealth makes the Gates' billions seem like small change?

FBI agent Mark Beamon believes in the existence of such people, and what's more thinks they are linked to the CIA, terrorist organisations, the Mafia and huge drug cartels. When a rocket launcher suddenly appears in the deserts of Arizona or Nevada, a young agent which the disgraced Beamon helped train is put on the case. To help her investigation, Beamon goes underground taking on a persona of a terrorist himself. About there things start to go wrong.

Another agent is killed, the Mafia man Beamon was working for is arrested, and the CIA is stirring trouble with the world's heroin suppliers, trying to distance themselves from the rocket launcher. Beamon then encounters the enigmatic Christian Volkov, perhaps the richest man in the world, perhaps not. To keep his cover, Beamon becomes manager of Volkov's heroin business. As events unfold, Beamon discovers Volkov has far superior intelligence sources than the combined US agencies, commands an enormous underground economy, and despite his criminal interests, is a highly cultured, well meaning person. He also finds the CIA has been hiding a lot of it's dealings from it's own government, and is not in control of heroin trafficking whatsoever.

The story throws up a number of moral dilemmas, like is a crime still a crime if it is committed to prevent a larger crime, or is the policy of "any means necessary" justifiable in conducting a nation's foreign affairs. The conclusion of the story is a little unexpected, but shows one possible solution to these dilemmas.

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Commentaires client les plus récents

2.0étoiles sur 5 Give it the heave-ho .......
The biggest problem in this book is the plot. This story rarely revolves around the Plot - Threat of a Rocket inside the US. Read more
Publié le Janv. 19 2004 par Sridhar Krishnan

3.0étoiles sur 5 A VERY standard conspiracy novel
This is the third or fourth novel Kyle Mills has written with Mark Beamon as a main character. Mark's the best investigator in FBI history (everyone says so, about every fifty... Read more
Publié le Janv. 6 2004 par David W. Nicholas

3.0étoiles sur 5 sphere of influence
Interesting story and set up. The setting of conflict between CIA and FBI in the drug wars is plausible. Read more
Publié le Déc 16 2003 par bill faris

3.0étoiles sur 5 Fun, but unbelievable
This was a pretty quick read, and once I got to around page 200, I was thoroughly enjoying it. If you tend to give up on books early, I would warn you away from this one. Read more
Publié le Déc 2 2003 par Vonkroft

4.0étoiles sur 5 Not His Best
I've just finished Mill's fourth? Mark Beamon Novel.
Mark Beamon is unhappily promoted to SAC (Special Agent In Charge) of the Phoenix F.B.I. Read more
Publié le Oct. 26 2003 par paul mason

4.0étoiles sur 5 Entertaining if Somewhat Standard
In Sphere of Influence, Kyle Mills brings back series character Mark Beamon, brilliant FBI agent whose life is filled with bad luck and his own socially inept decisions. Read more
Publié le Sep 19 2003 par mrliteral

3.0étoiles sur 5 What's up with Kyle Mills?
Although the latest Mark Beaman adventure features an engaging plot, sympathetic characters, an especially attractive villain, and a certain amount of plausibility in these... Read more
Publié le Sep 14 2003 par Jan P. Dennis

5.0étoiles sur 5 Can't say enough
I listen to the audiotapes as I go back and forth from work. I enjoy trying to figure out ahead of "Mark Beamon" the ending of his latest case. Read more
Publié le Aoû 4 2003

3.0étoiles sur 5 Great Story---HOWEVER....
Kyle Mills continue to impress with with his most recent novel. As usual, the storyline are imaginative and thought-provoking, with unwilling hero Mark Beamon again involved up... Read more
Publié le Juil 28 2003

5.0étoiles sur 5 Excellent Thriller
I believe this is Mr. Mills best so far and I can't wait for the next installment in the life of Mark Beamon. This is a page turner with lots of twists and turns. Read more
Publié le Avril 16 2003

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