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Balance of Power

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

When an American cargo ship off the coast of Indonesia is seized by terrorists and its crew slaughtered, the sitting Congress demands revenge. The president’s refusal to react aggressively leads to mounting resentment. Then an ambitious young congressional assistant, Jim Dillon, discovers a long-forgotten clause in America’s Constitution that could be used to wrest power from the chief executive—inciting a devastating constitutional crisis and plunging the country into chaos.

Now, a battle group steams toward a fateful confrontation in the Java Sea, commissioned by Congress and opposed by the president. Dillon finds himself in the center of a firestorm that rages from the highest court in the land to the killing fields half a world away, as the great nation prepares for war—with itself.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Where exactly is the ultimate power within the United States? Does it lie with the president, the Supreme Court, or Congress? What would happen if any two of these decided to go head to head on an issue of worldwide import? Huston's military thriller tackles these questions, using a terrorist attack on a U.S. merchant ship as its starting point. Adams Morgan jumps enthusiastically into the fray, racing through the fast-moving text with exactly the right nuances of pacing and characterization. His various politicians and commandos are easily distinguishable but never overperformed. Morgan sounds as impatient to dispatch a romantic subplot as the listener is to get on with the story. This book will easily keep you alert during a late-night drive. R.P.L. (c) AudioFile 2001, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 1, 1998
      A lot happens, to no great purpose, in this lackluster debut from former Navy pilot Huston. When Indonesians hijack an American freighter and kill the crew, the president refuses to retaliate. So the speaker of the house moves for impeachment on the grounds that the president is a closet Mennonite and pacifist, while his young aide Jim Dillon helps revive the congressional Letters of Marque and Reprisal--i.e., privateer commissions--to punish the hijackers, thus setting off a minor civil war at sea. Dillon gets off the Hill and into the action when he carries a Letter of Reprisal to the U.S. Navy group in the Java Sea and, in an even loopier plot turn, asks to go ashore with the invading forces. Off the battlefield, Dillon proves himself a wimpy washout in a tepid romance; the "terrorists" turn out to be merely pirates; the crisis is declared moot by the Supreme Court; the speaker inexplicably kills the impeachment bill (there is never a word about a vice president); and Huston strives for an ironic politics-as-usual ending. Except for David Pendleton, a silky old pro of a lawyer who steals every scene he's in, the characters are cardboard cutouts, while the book's hawkishness wears thin fast. Film rights to Disney; audio rights to HarperAudio; author tour.

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  • English

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