Book : The Templar Archive (the Lost Treasure Of The...

Modelo 51473965
Fabricante o sello Berkley
Peso 0.25 Kg.
Precio:   $51,199.00
Si compra hoy, este producto se despachara y/o entregara entre el 09-06-2025 y el 17-06-2025
Descripción
-Titulo Original : The Templar Archive (the Lost Treasure Of The Templars)

-Fabricante :

Berkley

-Descripcion Original:

James Becker, New York Times bestselling author of The Lost Treasure of the Templars and The Lost Testament, delivers a breakneck thriller continuing the adventures of antiquarian bookseller Robin Jessop and encryption expert David Mallory. While trying to decipher what few clues they have managed to recover about the Templar’s secrets, Jessop and Mallory discover that the legendary “treasure” they have been searching for may not be what they thought. Rather than gold or precious jewels, their long-sought prize may, in fact, be something far more valuable... Information. For the Templar Knights were the original inventors of international trade. And not all of it was in money. Lands, titles, the fates of entire noble houses were placed in their keeping. The records of such transactions, though centuries old, may possibly yield the greatest wealth in the world. But hunting for such an archive places Jessop and Mallory in the cross hairs of Europes most powerful families... Review Praise for James Becker’s novels “Fast-paced action propels the imaginative and controversial plot.”- Publishers Weekly “This is an utterly spellbinding book...stunning and breathtaking....I was left shattered and stunned.”-Euro Crime “James Bond meets Alex Cross.”-Fresh Fiction About the Author James Becker spent over twenty years in the Royal Navys Fleet Air Arm. Throughout his career he has been involved in covert operations in many of the worlds hotspots, including Yemen, Russia, and Northern Ireland. He is the author of The Lost Treasure of the Templars, as well as the Chris Bronson novels, including The Lost Testament and Echo of the Reich. He also writes action-adventure novels under the name James Barrington and military history under the name Peter Smith in the UK. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 1 Present day Via di SantAlessio, Aventine Hill, Rome, Italy Privacy costs money, and was a benefit that few could afford in Rome. The Via di SantAlessio was one of the most exclusive areas of the city, and in that quiet road privacy was both expensively purchased and expected. Very few of the properties located there displayed the slightest outward indication of what activity or activities were carried out inside them. One of these, a substantial detached building encircled by well-tended gardens behind high walls, offered nothing more than a house number to anyone who looked at it. Inside this building it was always busy, because it contained some of the more private administrative facilities of a much more public organization that was located in a building facing the Lungotevere Aventino, not too far from the minor basilica of Santa Sabina. One of the departments working within the building was a specialist intelligence and operational unit, a group of people who had virtually no contact with any of the other staff in the building because they had no need to do so. Their place of work was a small suite of air-conditioned rooms in the lowest level of the basement, accessed only through a steel-lined door that was permanently locked and only ever opened to allow the units staff to come and go. None of the other people working in the building, not even the most senior administrators, had any right of access to the basement at any time or for any reason. It formed the most private and deniable part of the Ordo Praedicatorum, was answerable to nobody, and had essentially unlimited funding. Provided, of course, that the long-term goals of the organization-goals that might appear senseless to an outsider-were met. In his private office within that suite, Silvio Vitale leaned back in his chair and stared with barely disguised hostility at the man standing in front of him. It was an obvious measure of the tone of the interview so far that his subordinate, Marco Toscanelli, was still standing rather than sitting in one of the comfortable leather chairs in
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