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The Voter File

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"Pepper comes through again with this clever tale of how cyber sabotage of elections, coupled with highly concentrated ownership of traditional media operations, can undermine American democracy."—President Bill Clinton
A twisty, one-step-ahead-of-the-headlines political thriller featuring a rogue reporter who investigates election meddling of epic proportions written by the ultimate insider.

Investigative reporter Jack Sharpe is down to his last chance. Fired from his high-profile gig with a national news channel, his only lead is a phone full of messages from a grad student named Tori Justice, who swears she's observed an impossible result in a local election. Sharpe is sure she's mistaken...but what if she isn't?
Sharpe learns that the most important tool in any election is the voter file: the database that keeps track of all voters in a district, and shapes a campaign's game plan for victory. If one person were to gain control of an entire party's voter file, they could manipulate the outcome of virtually every election in America. Sharpe discovers this has happened—and that the person behind the hack is determined to turn American politics upside down.
The more he digs, the more Sharpe is forced to question the values—and viability—of the country he loves and a president he admired. And soon it becomes clear that not just his career is in jeopardy...so is his life.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 30, 2020
      Pepper’s timely third novel featuring reporter Jack Sharpe (after 2018’s The Wingman) finds Sharpe, recently let go from his network TV job, drawn into freelancing by the surprising results in an obscure Wisconsin judicial election, where a heavily favored incumbent inexplicably lost to a neophyte. A low-level staffer who worked for the winning candidate explains to Sharpe that someone must have hacked the incumbent’s voter file, a treasure trove of semi-private and sometimes confidential information that both Democrats and Republicans keep on their registrants. Sharpe, a burned-out but nonetheless savvy journalist, logically wonders: why use such a potent political weapon to influence the result of such an inconsequential race? Sharpe has to fend off a brutal hit man as he gets on the trail of a foreign plot to take over entire segments of the U.S. economy. Never mind that the action spins into the overly dramatic toward the end. Pepper offers a well-researched, gripping look at one of the many perilous wrinkles in the electoral system. Agent: Mitch Hoffman, Aaron M. Priest Literary.

    • Kirkus

      April 1, 2020
      Nefarious forces try to rig American elections in this highly plausible political thriller. In Wisconsin, investigative reporter Jack Sharpe loses his job reporting for Republic News on TV. Saddled with a noncompete agreement, he freelances for newspapers and really needs a big story. Luckily, Tori Justice wants to tell him hers. She was the voter file manager for a local judge who won a special election even though "there's no conceivable way" he could have won. Voter files are even "better than polling," because they contain a huge amount of personal data on every voter collected by state and national parties, from voting records to magazine subscriptions to the ads people click on. Perhaps someone has hacked the voter files and rigged the election, but who? How? Why? Readers soon learn that this is a test case for a scheme that's "a lot bigger than Wisconsin," involving "at least one Albanian mobster" and other foreign criminals who intend to rig a presidential election. Their methods will be undetectable, so losing campaigns will be written off as having been run by incompetents. But when Justice exports the Wisconsin data for Sharpe, the European perps are still monitoring the computer, so they know someone could be on to them. Sharpe is sharp, so he knows that whoever is behind this is dangerous. Indeed, there are enough murders, tension, and fast pacing to check this story off as a thriller. Readers likely won't find many surprises, though, as the plot follows a predictable path. And while Sharpe isn't dull, he's no superstar either. He's just a good guy who gets the job done. Enjoyable, timely, and realistic.

      COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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