Martin Muntor has it in for the tobacco industry. He's dying of lung cancer and he's a dangerous man: he's smart and he's mad and he has nothing to lose. Muntor has it in for the tobacco industry. He doesn't give a damn who gets sacrificed as long as he can hurt the billion-dollar profits of Big Tobacco. The twisted journalist's plan is simple. He'll poison cigarettes with cyanide and slip them into convenience stores, restaurants and vending machines all over the U.S. He'll even leave deadly cigarettes in the playground of an elementary school. He knows the inevitable media frenzy will further his cause. But there's a complication: Nicholas Pratt, the CEO of Old Carolina Tobacco, Inc., has a bigger problem. He's trying to cover up his role in the disappearance of a company researcher who was preparing to go to the Department of Justice -- with evidence that Old Carolina was spiking the nicotine level of its cigarettes. Muntor's plot brings an unwanted spotlight to Pratt's illegal activities. Pratt hires an equally self-destructive man, Tommy Rhoads -- a man battling his own gambling and drinking demons. Chasing Muntor changes Rhoads, and as he gets closer to Muntor, he begins to see the madman's logic isn't so insane. Rhoads realizes Muntor kills people with cigarettes the same way tobacco companies do -- only Muntor expedites the process. When Rhoads finally gets Muntor's scent, there's no stopping him. But then there's no stopping Martin Muntor, either.
Martin Muntor has it in for the tobacco industry. He's dying of lung cancer and he's a dangerous man: he's smart and he's mad and he has nothing to lose. Muntor has it in for the tobacco industry. He doesn't give a damn who gets sacrificed as long as he can hurt the billion-dollar profits of Big Tobacco. The twisted journalist's plan is simple. He'll poison cigarettes with cyanide and slip them into convenience stores, restaurants and vending machines all over the U.S. He'll even leave deadly cigarettes in the playground of an elementary school. He knows the inevitable media frenzy will further his cause. But there's a complication: Nicholas Pratt, the CEO of Old Carolina Tobacco, Inc., has a bigger problem. He's trying to cover up his role in the disappearance of a company researcher who was preparing to go to the Department of Justice -- with evidence that Old Carolina was spiking the nicotine level of its cigarettes. Muntor's plot brings an unwanted spotlight to Pratt's illegal activities. Pratt hires an equally self-destructive man, Tommy Rhoads -- a man battling his own gambling and drinking demons. Chasing Muntor changes Rhoads, and as he gets closer to Muntor, he begins to see the madman's logic isn't so insane. Rhoads realizes Muntor kills people with cigarettes the same way tobacco companies do -- only Muntor expedites the process. When Rhoads finally gets Muntor's scent, there's no stopping him. But then there's no stopping Martin Muntor, either.
All Lock Gilkenney wants is a family. But he’ll have to cross the line to get one. Lock is a dedicated investigator at Child Protective Services. An anonymous report of neglect comes in. He responds and finds the kids in good health. Lock concludes the report was a ruse, possibly part of a scheme to make Natalie Mannheim, the kids’ mother, look bad in an upcoming divorce trial. Natalie needs Lock’s expertise to help her win custody—and a multi-million-dollar divorce settlement. He realizes she doesn't have a prayer in court against her shrewd husband, and only Lock can help her now. Lock knows all about addiction, and he’s aware of the powerful hold Natalie has on him. But he can’t get her out of his head. Lock is caught between his commitment to take the high road and his burning desire to have a family. In this story of love, lust, deceit and murder, what Lock chooses to do will grab your imagination and never let go.
All Lock Gilkenney wants is a family. But he’ll have to cross the line to get one. Lock is a dedicated investigator at Child Protective Services. An anonymous report of neglect comes in. He responds and finds the kids in good health. Lock concludes the report was a ruse, possibly part of a scheme to make Natalie Mannheim, the kids’ mother, look bad in an upcoming divorce trial. Natalie needs Lock’s expertise to help her win custody—and a multi-million-dollar divorce settlement. He realizes she doesn't have a prayer in court against her shrewd husband, and only Lock can help her now. Lock knows all about addiction, and he’s aware of the powerful hold Natalie has on him. But he can’t get her out of his head. Lock is caught between his commitment to take the high road and his burning desire to have a family. In this story of love, lust, deceit and murder, what Lock chooses to do will grab your imagination and never let go.
A smoker who contracted cancer decides to destroy the tobacco industry. He tampers with cigarette packs, lacing them with cyanide and the result is hundreds of deaths. Tom Rhoads, a former tobacco security man is sent to capture him.
In this monumental intellectual biography, Frank Sulloway demonstrates that Freud always remained, despite his denials, a biologist of the mind; and, indeed, that his most creative inspirations derived significantly from biology. Sulloway analyzes the political aspects of the complex myth of Freud as psychoanalytic hero as it served to consolidate the analytic movement. This is a revolutionary reassessment of Freud and psychoanalysis.
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