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The 500 : a novel  Cover Image Book Book

The 500 : a novel / Matthew Quirk.

Quirk, Matthew. (Author).

Summary:

Former con artist and Harvard Law student Mike Ford accepts a position with the DC-based Davies Group, a consulting firm whose specialty is pulling strings for the five hundred most powerful people inside the Beltway.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780316198622 :
  • ISBN: 0316198625 :
  • ISBN: 9780316329934 (pbk.) :
  • Physical Description: 326 p. ; 25 cm.
  • Edition: 1st ed.
  • Publisher: New York : Little, Brown and Company, 2012.

Content descriptions

General Note:
"A Reagan Arthur book."
Subject: Political corruption > Fiction.
Washington (D.C.) > Fiction.
Genre: Suspense fiction.

Available copies

  • 11 of 11 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Radium Hot Springs Public Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 11 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Radium Hot Springs Public Library FIC QUI (Text) 35130000025118 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -

More information


  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2012 May #1
    *Starred Review* In his first novel, journalist Quirk takes on the Washington, D.C., power structure in a thundering David-and-Goliath tale of corruption. Mike Ford is struggling to pay his tuition at Harvard law and settle his incarcerated father's debt when he's recruited by Henry Davies, who heads D.C.'s most influential consulting firm. Ford soon learns that the job, despite its six-figure salary, multiple perks, and enticing colleague, Annie Clark, is essentially a con game in which the Davies Group seeks to solidify influence with the 500 people who wield the real power inside the Beltway. And Ford, who learned cons, grifts, and more from his father, brings a special skill set to the game. Assigned to work on a job to amend a foreign-relations law to benefit a Serbian war criminal, he finagles a recording that indicates the lengths to which Davies will go to achieve its ends, thus embarking on a deadly cat-and-mouse game with his boss, trained killer William Marcus, and Davies himself. It leads, inevitably, to a final moral dilemma. Expect this propulsive page-turner, with high-stakes action that doesn't stop, to be one of the season's most talked-about debut thrillers. A sequel is in the offing and will be much anticipated. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: With movie rights sold just days after the book itself, the publisher will be orchestrating a blockbuster launch. Copyright 2012 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2012 June
    A one-sitting read for international crime fans

    Fans of international crime fiction will be happy to hear that Rome police commissioner Alec Blume is back for his third adventure in The Namesake by Conor Fitzgerald. This time he's investigating the murder of Matteo Arconti, a salaryman who bears the same name as one of the government's chief prosecutors of Mafia crimes. When Arconti's corpse is deposited onto the steps of the court building that houses the office of his namesake, there can be little doubt that the Mafia has left a no-uncertain-terms memo of warning to the magistrate. Blume quickly identifies a suspect, but jurisdictional issues complicate the matter; thus, our hero resorts to a bit of clever subterfuge to reel in his prey. He alters a letter from the suspect's wife to the magistrate, indicating that she is willing to make a confession of her husband's misdeeds; the confession, if true, would be an act of treason which cannot go unpunished. All that remains is to plant the letter somewhere it cannot be overlooked, and let things play out as they will. Blume's stratagem takes on a life of its own, however, with unforeseen (and unforeseeable) consequences. Plot-driven to the nth degree, The Namesake is a one-sitting read, intricately plotted, swiftly paced and resolved in a totally unexpected fashion.

    STANDOFF WITH A TWIST
    In hostage situations, the perpetrator usually conveys a set of demands to the authorities, typically money and some sort of escape mechanism. Not so in Mark Billingham's latest thriller, The Demands. London convenience store owner Javed Akhtar has a different idea: He has taken policewoman Helen Weeks hostage to compel her colleague, detective Tom Thorne, to reopen the investigation into the murder of his son. On the surface, the boy's death seems to be the result of random prison violence, but as Thorne scrambles to find evidence that will satisfy Akhtar, he comes to believe that there is much more to the case. Thorne undergoes intense pressure from two directions: In his shop, Akhtar wields a gun and has demonstrated his willingness to use it; outside, the hostage negotiators champ at the bit to use lethal force to end the standoff. The Thorne novels are high-tension, lightning-paced reads; The Demands is a worthy addition to a fine body of work.

    SHADY DEALINGS
    Two debut novels grace the Whodunit column this month, the first a taut political espionage thriller by Matthew Quirk, The 500. The title refers to the 500 most powerful movers and shakers in the country, most of whom are manipulated in some form by a consulting firm called the Davies Group. Harvard Law grad Mike Ford is the rising star of the firm's newcomers, a onetime con artist gone straight—more or less. As he will come to discover, his skills at identifying a "mark" and the follow-up manipulation will prove useful in his new career, where "legal" and "ethical" can be extremely fluid terms. Ford is an engaging narrator, endowed with a liberal dose of humor, often at his own expense. The plot moves along quickly and credibly, and the resolution is clever and satisfying. It is always a pleasure to read such a well-crafted debut; I'm looking forward to the sequel.

    TOP PICK IN MYSTERY
    Speaking of sequels, it's difficult to imagine that there can be many in store for Buck Schatz, the octogenarian hero of Daniel Friedman's Don't Ever Get Old. Nevertheless, I hope I am wrong about that, as Friedman's debut novel is one of the most original and entertaining tales I have read in many a moon. Schatz is a retired cop, a legend in Memphis law enforcement circles. Summoned to the deathbed of a WWII compatriot, Schatz discovers that a man he thought long dead, SS officer Heinrich Ziegler, in fact survived the war, having absconded with a wealth of gold bars stolen from concentration camp internees. Ziegler assumed a false identity and has lived under the radar for the past 60-some years. This does not sit well with the curmudgeonly Schatz, so, with the assistance of his tech-savvy grandson, he sets off in search of his onetime enemy and a small fortune in Nazi gold. Schatz is an anachronism: a chain-smoking Lucky Strike addict; a Luddite to a fault; cranky and crotchety at every juncture. He is also wickedly funny and full of pithy homilies. Don't Ever Get Old is just about as good as debut mysteries get. It may, in fact, mark the beginning of a new suspense subgenre: Geezer Noir. Long may it live!

    Copyright 2012 BookPage Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2012 May #1
    Washington, D.C., is the setting for this John Grisham-style thriller about a recent Harvard Law graduate who gets in way over his head at a sinister consulting and PR firm that will stop at nothing to control all 500 of the capital's top movers and shakers. Mike Ford thinks he's got it made working for Henry Davies, who shuttles between jobs as a distinguished Harvard professor and a seasoned "fixer" in Washington who worked for Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon. Ford's $200,000 salary will chase away his massive college debt, Davies' influence promises to get his con man father out of prison, and a beautiful senior consultant named Annie is his for the asking. Not bad for a scuffling blue-collar kid whose life seemed headed in another direction when he joined the Navy at 19. But it isn't long before Ford detects hidden agendas behind his assignment of cozying up to and collecting secrets about a congressman. He starts spying on his bosses, attaching GPS devices to cars, and getting himself threatened and hurt. The players include a Serbian war criminal called Rado; a Supreme Court justice with a Beretta and a human rights case before him; and Rado's seductive 23-year-old daughter, whom the justice is accused of abusing. Quirk's first novel is a breezy but not always sure-footed tale. As first-person narrators go, Ford doesn't make much of an impression, offering the usual mix of self-consciousness, regret and callow determination. If this book is filmed (20th Century Fox acquired the screen rights), it likely will lose its cheaper plot devices and rely less on a letter containing the only piece of dirt that can bring its villain down. A book that offers lots of action and gloomy shadows but not much dramatic traction. Copyright Kirkus 2012 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2012 January #1

    Having done time at the Atlantic, reporting on crime and other assorted evils, Quirk should get the details right in this debut thriller starring Harvard Law grad Mike Ford. Even as Mike rubs shoulders with Washington, DC's powerful 500, his past among shabby con men comes calling. A ten-city tour, film rights sold to 20th Century Fox, foreign rights sold to 11 territories—here's one debut that looks to be making it big.

    [Page 67]. (c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
  • LJ Express Reviews : LJ Express Reviews
    A year ago, Mike Ford was studying at Harvard Law with a mountain of debt from his late mother's cancer treatments and no help from his jailed con man father. Now, thanks to Henry Davies of the powerful Davies Group, Mike's father is out of prison, and the newly minted lawyer is out of debt, living in a nice house and getting very cozy with beautiful junior partner Annie Clark. Mike discovers, though, that the conning tricks that rubbed off from his father are as useful as his Harvard degree in his job helping Henry "influence" members of the 500-the most powerful individuals in Washington, DC. His immediate boss is William Marcus, a man whom Mike is certain once killed for the CIA. His current assignment involves a junior congressman and Rado, a Serbian war criminal. When a Supreme Court justice and Rado's daughter are murdered by William on Henry's orders, Mike is framed and must use all of his skills to survive. Verdict With a brash but naïve hero fighting a powerful, shadowy organization, this is fairly standard thriller fare that, while not rising above the pack, should satisfy genre readers. [See Prepub Alert, 12/12/11; ten-city tour.]-Eric Norton, McMillan Memorial Lib., Wisconsin Rapids (c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2012 April #1

    Former Atlantic reporter Quirk's engaging first novel transplants the milieu of Grisham's The Firm to the world of political lobbyists. After being recruited by Washington's leading consulting firm, the Davies Group, Harvard law student Mike Ford thinks he's left behind his blue-collar upbringing. While lobbying policymakers for his new mentor, firm founder Henry Davies, Mike gains a taste of what it's like to belong to America's political elite and begins dating his beautiful and patrician colleague, Annie Clark. Mike's work proves, however, to call less upon his political ideals than on criminal skills first acquired from his jailed con man father. As Mike ascends the Davies Group's hierarchy, he gradually realizes that the firm conceals a sinister political conspiracy. Quirk supplies just enough characterization and journalistic detail of Washington, D.C., life to ground his story as he launches into a streamlined, gripping man-on-the-run thriller. 10-city author tour. Agent: Shawn Coyne, the Endeavor Agency. (June)

    [Page ]. Copyright 2012 PWxyz LLC

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