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The Beijing Games

Pat DePaolo

 FormatISBN Price  
This Book is Available Paperback (6x9)9781434340887 $ 17.95  
This Book is Available Dust Jacket Hardcover (6x9)9781434340870 $ 24.95  
About the Book

THE BEIJING GAMES is a break-neck international thriller depicting a China-led conspiracy involving the most unlikely cabal of Washington insiders, a giant U.S. retailer, a private European banker, and a Chinese conglomerate controlled by the PLA. Their black goal is to eliminate all import  restrictions on Chinese-made goods, and effectively destroy large segments of the U.S. manufacturing industry in order to dictate spending decisions of millions of Americans for years to come. Set in  2008/2009, the only person standing in their way is 48-year-old failed businessman, Justin Gatt, an unlikely hero whose life is thrust into turmoil when he is recruited to travel undercover in China to attempt to gather information critical to the U.S.  Aided by three remarkable women who risk their lives to help him, Gatt escapes a Shanghai death-squad and a Chinese SAM missile.  Finally, he's caught in the cross-hairs of an assassin's sniper rifle, as he attempts to warn US officials of a conspiracy to unlease biological and financial attacks designed to stagger the US economy. When chaos follows the Olympics, Gatt must find a way to warn the President-elect of an even more deadly threat.     SEE READER COMMENTS BELOW:

 

About the Author

Pat DePaolo writes fiction full time after retiring from an active business and technical career spanning over forty-years.  A chemical engineer and graduate chemist, he has authored several non-fiction publications(Advances in Chemistry Series; first Handbook of Thermoplastic Elastomers; Modern Plastics Magazine; Findings); and studied fiction writing at the Famous Writers School in Westport.  He lives in Cheshire,Ct and Cape Cod, Mass with his wife, Phyllis.  The Beijing Games is his first novel, written after two years of extensive research on China, global trade and the real factors behind the alarming loss in U.S.manufacturing jobs, which are leading to an extermination of career opportunities for future generations.  A former CEO and founder of several small manufacturing companies, including an INC 500 128th Fastest Growing Private Company, Pat has first-hand knowledge of how small American manufacturing businesses have been ravaged by the so-called "inevitable globalization," which is underpinned, in large part, by a manipulative Chinese Communist government.  

 

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Excerpts from The Beijing Games:

Washington,D.C. Office of the US Ambassador to China.   "Yes, Mr. Ambassador," Justin Gatt answered, "Professor Syzmanski called me from Yale this morning.  He explained that you were interested in my assignment, and might be helpful in guiding me to unconventional sources of information in China."  Balzerini smiled at the manner in which his close friend had skirted the subject of gathering information. "Well...that's all true. But let me be candid. Professor Syzmansky recommended you for an assignment which goes far beyond acquiring competitive business data.  An assignment that is more critical to American interests."  The Ambassador paused.  "Frankly, I'm not sure you're prepared to carry it out safely."  He empathized with the anxious grimace on Justin's handsome face.  He was about to ask an intelligent, yet obviously disoriented man---who'd been forced to change careers three times in less than four months---to leap headlong into an unknown, dangerous assignment in an unfamiliar country.  As a bonus---it could land him in federal prison---or an early grave.                           Emei Shan, Sichuan Province, ChinaLili Qi arrived at Emei Station in Baoguosi, the region’s tourist center at the base of Emei Shan, via the Kunming Express, as the sun disappeared behind misty caps.  It was too late to prevent the Beijing tour guide's uncle Zhang from chopping up her forty-six year old mother’s body, and feeding it to the vultures nesting near the Yuxiansi…the Temple of Meeting Immortals, on the southern route to the 10,164 foot summit of Emei Shan.                  Level 4 Biological Hazards Lab, Jilin, China--Vials of purified E.coli bacteria and a strange, virus-like organism---biologically classified as a mycoplasma---were delicately inserted by Dr. Otto Ho Hot into separate sealed compartments in the mortar-shaped canister. The lead scientist from the Taiwan Research Institute for Agricultural Diseases had been  missing from the institute for several months; along with the entire inventory of an experimental agricultural pathogen he'd smuggled into mainland China. Under orders from a People’s Liberation Army general, he was now  packaging the canisters in falsely-labeled boxes, for delivery to the United States.  The "water filters" would soon explode over Midwest cornfields

Cambridge/Boston.  Lynne Hurricane studied the Hoover's Online print-out from an isolated computer terminal in Baker Library, the primary research facility of the Harvard School of Business.  She'd uncovered odd $5 million monthly transfers from BoxMart Stores to the Financial Flow Foundation; payments which had been cleared by an unknown official at the Federal Reserve Bank in Boston.  "We're stymied,"she exclaimed hoarsely to her former boyfriend, the head of Access Services at Baker, who suddenly pressed his thumbs gently against the cramped muscles of her neck and shoulders. "You smell so good when you're tense.  I never should have thrown you out."  He held up his hands and backed away when she turned to argue the opposite.  "I know, I know.  You love computer geeks and bookworms...but not if we're the same guy."  He desperately wanted her to remain.  "I have another idea, but may have to kill you if we use it."  Lynne watched in amazement as he inserted a CD disk marked, "Experimental Anti-Firewall Software, Property of the President and Fellows of Harvard College."                                                        Sioux City Memorial Hospital.  "If you can just keep him alive through a low-sugar shock cycle, we'll have proof," Virginia pleaded.  "It'only your theory," the cardiologist replied callously. "I'm not familair with such organisms."  He was thinking about the recent 25 percent increase in liability insurance premiums.  "As feasible as it may seem to you, Ms. Richmore, I can't risk allowing my patient to run low on sugar.  If he dies it will be without my assistance." The head nurse heard the frenzied debate.  Hasn't he got that backward?


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