Dave Hart is back in David Charters' third instalment of his cult City series. But the drugs, the women and the deals are no longer working, and Dave is bored. So he decides to shake things up again - and makes a pledge to save Africa. Suddenly, breaking the law, bullying the clients and donating th
The Ego's Nest (Dave Hart 5)
β Scribed by Charters, David
- Book ID
- 110484588
- Publisher
- Elliott & Thompson
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 101 KB
- Series
- Dave Hart 5
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9781907642449
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Dave Hart, charismatic leader of the fallen giant, Grossbank, is dead. But itβs worse than that. He's in love. In the midst of an opium-and-sex-fuelled haze in the heart of Cambodia, having made billions of dollars from Grossbankβs collapse before faking his own death, he is desperate to return to London and get The Girl. And in this case, it's not just any girl Β itβs Laura 'Two Livers' Mackay, the most intelligent, independent, powerful woman around Β with the kind of figure that would make a dead man restless. But how exactly do you rise from the dead? How do you go about resurrecting the financial world following a devastating economic crash? And why are some of the shadiest figures in organised crime so keen to give you upwards of a hundred billion dollars? The Ego's Nest is a witty, gripping, fast-paced tale of one man trying to stay true to his beliefs no matter how jaded and immoral they may be, in a world where ethical business is obviously bad...
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Two novels and a collection of short stories, featuring the anti-heroic banker, Dave Hart, the satirical creation of David Charters. This omnibus edition contains the novels: 'Where Egos Dare', 'The Ego's Nest' and the short story collection, 'No Tears'.
The Regulator is Wes Hart β ex-soldier, ex-Texas Ranger, ex-rider with Billy the Kid. He's tough, ruthless, and slick with a .45. He's for hire now and he isn't cheap...The good citizens of Caldwell had raised a fistful of dollars to pay for the railroad that would bring the Santa Fe thundering to t