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The Rule of Nine

by Steve Martini

Series: Paul Madriani (11)

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5523543,902 (3.47)14
After a career terrorist threatens to destroy the Supreme Court in a single horrible act, defense attorney Paul Madriani must put his life on the line in order to stop the sinister deed before it comes to fruition.
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» See also 14 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 36 (next | show all)
Wouldn't recommend it. Wasn't remotely interesting until the end. The plot was poorly described. Could have been so much better..... ( )
  PamS76 | Feb 17, 2021 |
Wouldn't recommend it. Wasn't remotely interesting until the end. The plot was poorly described. Could have been so much better..... ( )
  PamS76 | Feb 17, 2021 |
An engrossing thriller with an unsatisfactory ending. San Diego attorney Paul Madriani gets caught up in a terrorist plot to blow up the Supreme Courthouse with all the justices inside it. It was a little difficult to differentiate between several of the characters. The protagonist Paul Madriani has two associates, one named Herman and the other named Harry. It was too easy to confuse the two. Similarly, the head of the FBI investigating team is named Thorpe, while the field-leader of the terrorist team is named Thorn.

Also, I didn’t know this until I finished the book, but this book is part of a series, which means that many confusing things where probably explained in a previous book, and the lose ends at the end will have to be resolved in a subsequent book. For instance, Madriani is drawn into this case because a Mexican hit-man has a grudge against him unrelated to this book. That grudge is not fully explained and must have been developed in an earlier book. Then at the end, after all the bad guys are stopped, the Mexican hit-man remains at large, presumably nursing the grudge.

Overall, I would not recommend this book. ( )
  ramon4 | Nov 29, 2016 |
I enjoyed listening to this Martini’s book “The Rule of Nine”, on CD, but it is not one of my favorites. I just finished reading Reece Hirsch’s first novel “The Insider” and felt it was much more of a legal thriller. Martini’s book was not a courtroom drama, but rather a chase across the country with the bad guys close behind. The Insider was a much better match with the international suspense novel genre.

Lawyer Paul Madriani is the main character in this novel with several other primaries, including his daughter and a Supreme Court judge named Root whoplays an important part of the underlying evil in this story. The book begins its story line when a young and inexperienced congressional aide/worker breaks the rules and allows a nice visiting tourist to view and, unknown to him, take pictures of an unauthorized area in the governmental offices.

What follows includes flight and fight and the bribes and perks given to high officials. The story also revolves around the Supreme Court and the durations of their seated positions. I didn’t like the introduction of “The Mexicutioner” as a character, but understood the need for the assassin concept to be introduced to the story.

Several questions are advanced in this novel that made me ask myself about issues such as should there be term limits for Supreme Court Judges and what do we really know or need to know about national security. All in all, it was an enjoyable book and those who follow Martini’s novel will find the on-going stories about Madriani as involving as always. ( )
  WeeziesBooks | Feb 27, 2011 |
Pretty standard Martini novel except the ending...very weak. ( )
  Papa51 | Oct 17, 2010 |
Showing 1-5 of 36 (next | show all)
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I dedicate this book to my loyal assistant, Marianne Dargitz,

without whose help my work would not be possible.
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Jimmie Snyder was twenty-three, tall and lanky.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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After a career terrorist threatens to destroy the Supreme Court in a single horrible act, defense attorney Paul Madriani must put his life on the line in order to stop the sinister deed before it comes to fruition.

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The Old Weatherman dreams of a plan that could be his swan song, an attack to drive a stake through the heart of the right-wing establishment and bury it for good. Now he's found the money, the ideal weapon, and the professional who knows how to use it. And he has set his sights on the perfect target at the very seat of the United States government, in the heart of downtown Washington. It will be a strike heard round the world.

San Diego defense attorney Paul Madriani is still reeling from the trauma of a near nuclear explosion he helped avert at the naval base in Coronado. Threatened by federal authorities to keep quiet about the close call in California, Madriani is now faced with a new problem in the steely-eyed and alluring Joselyn Cole, a weapons control expert, who believes he has to go public with what he knows if they have any hope of stopping a similar event in the future.

But Madriani has been linked to the murder of a Washington, D.C., political staffer, and authorities believe a shadowy figure called Liquida—a hired assassin known as "the Mexicutioner"—may be responsible. And this man, as the last survivor of the attack in San Diego, might be driven by a bizarre and horrifying star-crossed vendetta, and might now be looking for Madriani himself. What Madriani and Cole begin to fear is that the Old Weatherman and this madman have joined forces and intend to pull the city—and the country—into a vortex of terror before Madriani and Cole can find answers to the enigma that is "the rule of nine."
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