Who was Harold Spencer? All D.C. Lawyer Jack Patterson knew was that Spencer's dead body had been found on the 18th Green of Columbia Country Club, cancelling Jack's Saturday golf game. Who is Rachel Goodman? Her name has been plastered on the front page of every newspaper in the country for weeks, branded as a thief of confidential information vital to U.S. National Security and a spy for Israel. Turns out she is also the daughter of Jack's long-time friend and mentor, Ben Jennings. Despite the opposition of his friends and clients, Jack feels compelled to defend Rachel. Jack and his team go to work against the Federal Government, the all-powerful military-industrial complex, most of the press and Congress, all of whom are convinced that Rachel is guilty and should receive the death penalty for her treason. Clovis Jones, Jack's long-time friend and confidante, is the victim of a vicious attack. The more Jack and his team dig, the more complicated and dangerous their work becomes. Even a volunteer group of Navy SEALs may not be enough protection. Who will be next? Jack and his team discover the key to Rachel's exoneration lies with Harold Spencer, the man found dead on the eighteenth green. Jack rushes to discover who killed Spencer and why, but Spencer's murderer has now trained his sights on Jack, and will stop at nothing to prevent Jack from discovering why Rachel told him, "all is not as it seems."
Who was Harold Spencer? All D.C. Lawyer Jack Patterson knew was that Spencer's dead body had been found on the 18th Green of Columbia Country Club, cancelling Jack's Saturday golf game. Who is Rachel Goodman? Her name has been plastered on the front page of every newspaper in the country for weeks, branded as a thief of confidential information vital to U.S. National Security and a spy for Israel. Turns out she is also the daughter of Jack's long-time friend and mentor, Ben Jennings. Despite the opposition of his friends and clients, Jack feels compelled to defend Rachel. Jack and his team go to work against the Federal Government, the all-powerful military-industrial complex, most of the press and Congress, all of whom are convinced that Rachel is guilty and should receive the death penalty for her treason. Clovis Jones, Jack's long-time friend and confidante, is the victim of a vicious attack. The more Jack and his team dig, the more complicated and dangerous their work becomes. Even a volunteer group of Navy SEALs may not be enough protection. Who will be next? Jack and his team discover the key to Rachel's exoneration lies with Harold Spencer, the man found dead on the eighteenth green. Jack rushes to discover who killed Spencer and why, but Spencer's murderer has now trained his sights on Jack, and will stop at nothing to prevent Jack from discovering why Rachel told him, "all is not as it seems."
Webb Hubbell, former Associate Attorney General of the United States, is an author and lecturer. His novels, When Men Betray, Ginger Snaps, and A Game Of Inches, and his memoir, Friends in High Places are published by Beaufort Books. When Men Betray won one of the IndieFab awards for best novel in 2014. Ginger Snaps Won the IPPY Awards Gold Medal for best suspense/thriller. He also writes a daily blog of personal meditations at thehubbellpew.com.
Once again, Webb Hubbell has triumphed, embroiling Jack and his
cast of characters in an almost impossible situation. But nothing's
impossible for Jack Patterson-we know that-not even when national
security is pitted against criminal justice. In The Eighteenth
Green, forget golf. We've got espionage, murder, downloaded state
secrets, prison, Navy SEALS, missile designs, suicide, and much
more. It takes the crafty mind-of whom? an anti-trust lawyer, of
course (which Jack is)-to deal with these things, while he still
eats well, drinks well, travels on private jets between D.C. and
Little Rock, finds love and sex, and remains loyal to friends and
family. -- Anne Harding Woodworth, Author of "The Last Gun" and
"The Eyes Have It"
"The Eighteenth Green is Hubbell's best to date. I loved them all,
but I couldn't put this one down. Surprises and mystery around an
issue we should all care about." -- Bill Clinton, 42nd President of
the United States and co-author of "The President Is Missing"
"Webb Hubbell scores with his latest fictional legal thriller, The
Eighteenth Green. D.C. attorney Jack Patterson is once again pulled
away from his antitrust work into a high-stakes, political mystery
that begins with a shocking murder on a golf course and then
roller-coasts its way through the Pentagon, Israel, Pawley's
Island, South Carolina, and Little Rock, Arkansas. Patterson
doggedly investigates allegations that the daughter of his close
friend and mentor is a spy for Israel, and bumps up against egos,
special interests and political ambitions along the way. Expect not
only dangerous, near-death run-ins for Patterson, but also close
calls for his nearest and dearest associates. Hubbell masterfully
weaves his familiar characters into this new plot, introduces new
foils and love interests, and uses his characteristically
conversational style to illuminate a complex, intriguing tale that
harkens the reader back to the days of Oliver North and the
Iran-Contra Affair. Mining his own career history in D.C., Hubbell
gifts the reader with a window into Washington press briefings,
"off-the-record" exchanges with reporters, political banter and
high-level lobbying. Jack Patterson navigates his way to a
satisfying finish in The Eighteenth Green, with plenty of room for
future adventure and action." -- David Rudolf, criminal defense and
civil rights attorney. Featured in the Netflix series, "The
Staircase."
"I need Webb Hubbell to write more rapidly. Too much time elapses
between Jack Patterson thrillers. Webb is such a skilled writer,
and he knows his way around so many "rooms"-uptown and downtown,
political and domestic-that his stories are buttressed with the
facts and detail that support belief. I'm no golfer, butThe
Eighteenth Greenis no sand-trap. It's another smart, sophisticated,
Patterson mind-puzzle by Webb Hubbell that I couldn't put down." --
Peter Coyote, actor, author
I know of no other author of legal thrillers who outshines Webb
Hubbell in knowledge of the law or the skills that bring a great
novel to life.The Eighteenth Green is his best yet. At the last
stop on a field of battle where the loser buys the winner a drink
lies a man whose battles in a far deadlier game are over. At first,
Jack Patterson knows the dead man only as the reason his golf game
is canceled, but that will change. Anchoring the sizzling plot that
follows is one of the most engaging protagonists in fiction today.
By the middle of Webb Hubbell's first legal thriller, I was a fan
of this lawyer who breaks the mold of the ditto hero: a genial
gentleman who can turn as tough as he needs to be, whose deadliest
weapon is his mind, and who will put his life on the line for his
ideals. By The Eighteenth Green of this latest Jack Patterson
thriller, I wished he could step from the world Webb Hubbell
renders so real into our own, which could use more men like him. --
Steven Spruill, author of "Rulers of Darkness" and "Ice Men: A
Novel of the Korean War"
TheEighteenth Greenis an exciting read! Jack Patterson, the
leadcharacter in Webb Hubbell's book series, becomes more and more
like a family member in each book! A family member that has
bigadventures in a dangerous world! A family member you hope willbe
at the next family gathering! -- Harry Thomason, Producer/Director:
"Designing Women," "Evening Shade," "The Last Ride"
"I loved this book! I read it aloud to my wife and she adored it as
well! Webb Hubbell has done it again, bringing Jack Patterson and
the gang back, now spiced up with some new recruits, and taking on
the big - in this casereally big- bad guys. A fast pace, an
intricate and surprising plot, a truly shocking development, a
couple of surprising if delightful turns and Hubbell's intricate
knowledge of the Washington games make The Eighteenth Green a
hoot!" -- Mike Farrell, best known as BJ Hunnicutt of M*A*S*H, is
the author of 'Just Call Me Mike; A Journey to Actor and Activist'
and 'Of Mule and Man.'
In this fourth book of Webb Hubbell's Jack Patterson series of
thrillers,The Eighteenth Greencarries on his tradition of smart,
suspenseful writing.The characters are by now familiar, but the
there is nothing routine about the plot. The daughter of Jack
Patterson's old friend has been arrested and charged with
espionage. The facts appear damning, and, as always, the federal
prosecutors hold all the cards. This is not your run-of-the-mill
thriller. Hubbell's own experience in the law and in the workings
of the federal government create an air of painful experience that
brings credibility and nuance to his descriptions of the behind the
scenes machinations, leaks, and lies that inevitably creep in to
corrupt an all-powerful federal system and the lobbyists and
politicians who feed at the trough. The picture one takes away of
what goes in in Washington is chilling because it seems so very
real.That chill keeps the book rolling right to the very end. It
adds depth and substance to the story, and leaves the reader with
some very serious questions to consider about the nature of
government. The writing style of most thrillers can try the
patience of a thoughtful reader. Not so with Hubbell. The
characters speak with authenticity, the writing is clean and crisp,
and the reader's intelligence is respected, while the plot leaps
and bounds with an energy and suspense that makes it difficult to
turn out the light. Pick it up, and be prepared to neglect
everything else until the end. I highly recommendThe Eighteenth
Green,and I look forward eagerly to the next installment of Jack
Patterson's adventures. -- J.F. Riordan, author of "North of the
Tension Line", "The Audacity of Goats", and "Robert's Rules"
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