The People's House

by David Pepper

Paperback, 2016

Call number

SUSP PEP

Collection

Publication

St. Helena Press (2016), 400 pages

Description

Fiction. Literature. Thriller. HTML: Can someone heist the majority of the House of Representatives with no one noticing? That's the electoral coup that turns America upside down in THE PEOPLE'S HOUSE......Until one man notices. Political reporter Jack Sharpe is logging time at the tail end of a disappointing career â?? jaded about politics and stung by personal hard knocks. But after an odd election result in the Ohio Congressional district he covers, Sharpe stumbles across irregularities that spur him to dig deeper. The story takes him far beyond his corner of Ohio as he discovers an international plotâ??one that strikes at the heart of American democracy by taking advantage of weaknesses in today's political architecture. His reporting leads to a showdown with the philandering Congressman and Presidential contender who knew about the plan but told nobody, and the eccentric but deadly Russian energy baron who masterminded it all. In order to save himself and the country, Sharpe must rekindle his old fire to navigate a treacherous journey through danger, betrayal, and atonement… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member labdaddy4
This is a very chilling novel depicting a Russian oligarch's meddling in American elections - and succeeding. The author is a former member of the House of Representatives and was published before the 2016 US national elections. There were many times this book literally sent chills down my spine. I
Show More
am looking forward to reading The Wingman - the authors next book.
Show Less
LibraryThing member breic
A political thriller about gerrymandering and voting machine elections fraud—I love the concept! The execution fell flat. Pepper tells, not shows, through the entire book, spelling out every plot point over and over, and over again. Then you get constant flashbacks to spell it out a tenth time (I
Show More
assume these were meant as filler, to get the page count up, because they achieve nothing else). There is only one character really, with no foil for interesting conversations, and the writing is just plain (but with plenty of typos).

The plot doesn't make much sense. In the whole country there is only one political reporter? And the happily-ever-after ending just feels fake.
Show Less
LibraryThing member JohnJGaynard
This novel is an intense, and intensely rewarding, political thriller written by an American politician. When I read the introduction, I saw, with some misgiving, that the author purposely set out to write a novel with a message. But that misgiving was dispelled by chapter two of the novel, and
Show More
replaced itself with the tingle of excitement as I realized I had a real page turner in my hands that was going to teach me about a part of American life I know next to nothing about. I settled back to read about true-to-life murder, sexual harassment, Russian and American thugs, and honest people who, unfortunately, often don't speak up until after the consequences of their silence have brought them more guilt than they can continue to carry. The plot, and how the corruption is uncovered, resonate more today than they would have done before we learned so much about Russian meddling in the last U.S. presidential election. Pepper uses his knowledge of the American voting system to show how it can be sabotaged, at a fairly low cost, by any large corporation, never mind large country, wishing to get unwitting (but strongly partisan) politicians elected to serve its cause. In his warts and all depiction of his journalist hero, Jack Sharpe, Pepper also shows us the challenges of working on a local American newspaper, and the power wielded by a journalist and his editors determined to protect democracy. With regard to gerrymandering, U.S. political parties who never want their politicians to even risk losing an election, have created a situation where a foreign entity doesn't need to concentrate its resources on even 50 percent of the States, or even 50 percent of the counties in a State, to ensure itself a favorable outcome, but I don't wish to spoil the enjoyment you'll get out of reading this book, which has an ending that would have delighted Machiavelli, so I'll end my review here.
Show Less
LibraryThing member markm2315
A very good political thriller that doesn't strain your credulity.
----------------------
I'm now marked as an old man with certainty, since, although the battle is long over (if there was one), I cannot read "impact" for "affect" without wincing. Even worse are the widespread use of "impacted"
Show More
(exclusive of the dental literature) and, more horrible still, "impactful". I know how the generations before me felt when they encountered the now thoroughly acceptable "hopefully". The author is young enough and open-minded enough for this usage to appear frequently in this novel. I only mention it to warn the elderly.
Show Less

Pages

400

ISBN

1619845121 / 9781619845121
Page: 0.1256 seconds