House Rules: A Joe DeMarco Thriller (The Joe DeMarco Thrillers, 3)
House Rules: A Joe DeMarco Thriller (The Joe DeMarco Thrillers, 3) book cover

House Rules: A Joe DeMarco Thriller (The Joe DeMarco Thrillers, 3)

Price
$22.86
Format
Hardcover
Pages
368
Publisher
Atlantic Monthly Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0871139832
Dimensions
6.5 x 1.5 x 9.5 inches
Weight
1.45 pounds

Description

From Publishers Weekly At the start of Lawson's snappy third thriller starring congressional snoop Joe DeMarco (after The Second Perimeter ), a series of three failed attempts by Muslim terrorists to attack Washington, D.C.—one by plane, one by car, one by lone suicide bomber—causes nationwide panic. DeMarco wades into the mess when his boss, House Speaker John Mahoney, asks him to check out the possibility that the terrorist onslaught may have been more homegrown than it appears. Quickly appearing on DeMarco's radar is a suspicious, high-profile piece of anti-Islamic legislation, pushed by the blowhard junior senator from Virginia, that's on the fast track for approval. While the efficient plot takes some predictable turns, Lawson's engaging characters, with DeMarco leading the pack, come across as seriously flawed individuals trying to navigate a political world of high demands and constant distractions. Full of insider information, this novel reinforces Lawson's place in the upper rank of Washington thriller specialists. (June) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Features & Highlights

  • Mike Lawson’s Joe DeMarco thrillers have drawn praise for their fine-tuned suspense, off-kilter characters, intricate plots, and revealing portrait of Washington, DC behind closed doors. In
  • House Rules
  • , a terrorist bombing of the Baltimore Harbor Tunnel is narrowly avoided. Then a private plane headed straight for the White House ignores warnings and is shot down. An atmosphere of fear and panic overruns the country, and when the junior senator from Virginia proposes to deport all noncitizen Muslims and run extensive background checks on all Muslim Americans, his bill gains surprising traction.Speaker of the House John Mahoney is not pleased. He knows it is the kind of knee-jerk response people will come to regret, like Japanese internment camps, and he needs to find a way to kill the bill before it exposes a secret he wants to keep. So Mahoney calls his man DeMarco. An average guy who struggles with debt, divorce, and an unreasonable boss, DeMarco is an unlikely hero, in over his head, relying on old friends as he attempts to get to the bottom of the attacks in this riveting read, full of suspense, fascinating characters, humor, and timely political intrigue.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(190)
★★★★
25%
(158)
★★★
15%
(95)
★★
7%
(44)
23%
(145)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

House Rules

The back cover PR says that "Mike Lawson is a talented thriller writer who is only getting better". That is an understatement.......Mike Lawson has catapulted himself into (in my mind) the ranks alongside such greats as Baldacci, Flynn, and Thor. "House Rules" is one terrific book.

As "House Rules" opens, several foiled terrorist acts have the nation on edge.

The first foiled attack prevented two American Muslim's from blowing up the Baltimore Harbor Tunnel. Unfortunately, the third member, and leader, was not in the building at the time of the FBI raid and was not captured. Upon questioning the two young men the FBI were able to identify the man, "Muhammad" , as an "honest-to-God al-Qaeda operative".

Two weeks after that aborted attack, Senator William Davis Broderick introduced a bill that would severely limit the freedom of all Muslims (citizens or not) in the U.S. Introducing the bill made Senator Broderick an instant media star, but, it was three more American Muslim terrorist attacks (all were foiled) that catapulted the bill to approval in the Senate and moved it to the House, where it sat in deliberation per instructions from Speaker of the House John Mahoney.

This is where Mahoney asks Joe DeMarco, special Congressional troubleshooter, to find out the true story behind the situation. The FBI had a theory, and it sounded great, but, where others fail to uncover the whole truth, DeMarco, Emma, and computer geek, Neil, succeed. With additional help from individuals in Homeland Security, FBI, and other law enforcement agencies, DeMarco's team uncovers a complex, multi-layered, plot to enlist these American Muslims to commit terrorist acts.....with the express purpose of encouraging the passage of Broderick's "Muslim Registry" bill.

DeMarco and friends slowly unravel the truth, and people, behind the plot. The mystery, intrigue, and violence ratchet up as time and time again well laid plans and schemes to uncover the next higher person in the plot are hindered by surprising and complicated twists and turns. Great reading!

TracyReaderDad
36 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Entertaining thriller

This is the third in the Joe DeMarco series about a guy who works as an unofficial trouble shooter for The Speaker of the House in Washington. The Speaker, Mahoney, is an abrasive and slightly corrupt character although a very shrew operator with a heart of gold. De Marco is a tenacious guy with a group of friends that usually help him out when he is desperate.

Two really interesting and unusual characters - with Mahoney you see the corruption of US politics and with DeMarco you have someone who looks tough and hard but actually isn't - a bit of a twist of the usual invincible ex Special services type.

The plot is an interesting one too - again a slight twist on the usual Muslim extremist terror attacks. Here we have a US Senator proposing strict controls on all Muslims just as two terror attacks are thwarted which seem to support his view and thus he gains unexpected public support. The trouble is that the son of an old friend of Mahoney was involved so Mahoney asks DeMarco to have a quiet look into it. As readers of this kind of stuff will know, `a quiet look' usually becomes something else.....

Set with interesting characters and a scenario that captures the fear of terror attacks and a blame culture this is very good stuff indeed. I liked the characters and the interplay between them and the author also provides a subtle vein of humour. The characters make mistakes and have their own failings which make them more interesting and believable.

Mike Lawton is getting better and better with each novel and this suggests that the next one may be something very special indeed.
19 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Best of the series

This is a great series which starts with The Inside Ring followed by The Second Perimeter followed by the current novel, House Rules. Several reviewers have stated this is the best of three and I agree, however, I enjoyed all of them and I would recommend you start with the first and read all of them. He's an excellent writer. This was definitely a book I didn't want to put down!
4 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Another Lawson hit

As a Mike Lawson fan, I couldn't wait to get a copy of his latest DeMarco yarn. I wasn't disappointed. In my opinion, this is his best yet, packed with typical Lawson humor, an intriguing plot, and totally memorable characters. Highly recommended for thriller fans.
4 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

This is a very good book

Of course Joe DeMarco is in trouble again. What is important in this book is he is discovering the over weight of politicians similiar to what we are learning in our country today. Good read.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

4.5 Star Thriller that Delivers

Mike Lawson has given us a book with a timely believable plot, lots of plot twists, and a superb cast of characters. The dialogue is snappy, the action scenes are taut, and the resolution is "O. Henryesque."

I zipped through the book, and stayed up late to finish it. Highly recommended!

SPOILER ALERT:
The reason this book doesn't rate 5-stars is because there is a superfluous subplot that adds nothing to the meat of the book, and seems as though it was added in to pad the pages.