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Paranoia : A Novel

Paranoia : A Novel

List Price: $24.95
Your Price: $17.46
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Classic Thrills with a Modern Spin
Review: This book is being hailed as the advent of the contemporary thriller. Although "Paranoia" is in many ways a throwback to good old fashioned suspense, the praise is warranted. The story reads like a mix of Harlan Coben and John Grisham. The writing is lean, the plotting tight, and--despite the fast pace--Finder allows time for the characters to live and breathe. My heart was racing because I cared about these characters.

The conflict revolves around Adam Cassidy. He's an under-achiever at Wyatt Telecom, a likeable guy, an occasional risk-taker. He's also a man hiding from his own estranged feelings toward his dying father. Adam's character traits and flaws are put to the test when he finds himself blackmailed into corporate espionage after throwing an unauthorized party on company funds.

Within the first few pages, the rollercoaster ride begins. To avoid legal procedures, Adam succumbs to the pressure of his dictatorial boss and agrees to steal hi-tech secrets from Wyatt's rival, Trion Systems. Before he knows it, he is caught in a web of lies and deception. His actions threaten his budding romance with a coworker, his own safety, and his chance of coming to any reconciliation with his feelings toward his father.

The short chapters and snappy dialogue of "Paranoia" kept me turning the pages, but it was my concern for Adam and his somewhat self-imposed troubles that kept me hooked. Finder gives time for matters of the heart, while advancing his story on every page.

Paranoia is the key that starts the whole scheme, and, ultimately, Adam Cassidy discovers that his paranoia is justified. As the ending drew close, I hoped for the best, yet feared the worst. Instead, Finder pulls out a few surprises that bring his tale to a bittersweet, somehow inevitable, conclusion. This masterpiece mixes components of such classics as "The Firm" and "The Sting" into a modern thriller for the hi-tech generation.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Roller-Coaster Ride
Review: I always enjoy Joseph finder's thrillers - they keep me turning the pages late into the night. "Paranoia" was no exception.

This time, Finder ventures into the world of corporate espionage in a high-tech business and makes the reader feel all the anxiety encountered by the unwitting and inexperienced spy, Adam Cassiday.

At the beginning of the book, Adam is a low-level employee at Wyatt Telecom who gets into some deep trouble, and is then blackmailed by his powerful employer into becoming a coporate spy at a rival company. It is that or jail. He is given a total makeover and prepped by a behavioral psychologist to cope with the demands at Trion Systems.

Adam then must pretend to have been a whiz kid at Wyatt after he is hired by Trion, totally based on his false credentials. He is constantly on edge, spending all of his time attempting to keep up with the demands of his new job while trying to spy for Wyatt. Complicating his life are his guilt about his dying father and the new, elaborate lifestyle which he has come to enjoy. His Porsche, his fancy apartment, and his beautiful new girlfriend are not enough to assauge his conscience, though, and he must eventually decide whether to continue the betrayal of his basic principles.

I did find it hard to swallow that so many of the corporate people were such bad guys and gals and also that Adam would meet his "keepers" from Wyatt in such public places. But despite a few improbable situations and an abrupt ending that left me scratching my head and wondering if I had pages missing, I enjoyed this book and would not hesitate to recommend it. I am certain that it will be a great success.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Finder Wins a New Fan
Review: This was one of those buy-in-a-hurry-at-airport-bookstore situations. And from the first chapter, I knew I was going to like this book. It reminds me of early John Grisham novels where an ordinary guy gets pulled into situations over his head. This one has the best surprise endings of any book I've read in years. Gotta go...must get back to Amazon.com to order one of this writer's previous books. As for you, go ahead and try this one, you'll love it as beach weather soon arrives.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Full of twists and turns
Review: Author Joseph Finder has written about espionage and international affairs for the New York Times and other newspapers, and is also a member of the Association of Former Intelligence Officers. So it would stand to reason that he had seen it all in the realm of espionage. Yet, in the acknowledgements at the end of the book, he states that his research on his other novels "has taken me around the world and into places like KGB headquarters in Moscow, but nothing prepared me for how strange and fascinating I'd find the world of the American high-tech corporation." In Paranoia, he combines high-tech business with corporate security and espionage to create an exciting thriller that the reader will not soon forget.

Adam Cassidy is the quintessential slacker who is tired of his job at Wyatt Telecom. He diverts corporate funds to throw a large retirement party for a loading dock employee, and he fully expects to be fired for it. But instead he is threatened with criminal charges if he does not agree to steal highly confidential product plans from Trion, a rival of Wyatt. With the help of the Wyatt's CEO, security chief, and executive coach, he is groomed for an executive job at Trion. He is taught to breach the tightest corporate security and turn over his findings. Thus begins his life as a corporate spy, where the game he is playing becomes more and more treacherous, his loyalties to his friends and employers are stretched to the limit, and he is caught in a web of deceit from which there seems to be no exit.

The characters are well drawn and believable. Finder expertly depicts Adam's struggle with his conscience, his problems with his ailing father and best friend, his worries about being unmasked as a spy, and his fondness for his Trion CEO. This makes him a very sympathetic protagonist. The two corporate presidents are strongly contrasted: the Wyatt CEO is ruthless, aloof, and vain; the Trion CEO is paternal, benevolent, and demands honesty. Also included in the interesting cast of characters are a quirky staff engineer, some power-hungry middle managers, a jealous and competitive coworker, and a shady security chief with a penchant for violence.

The suspense kept me on the edge of my seat, and the final plot twist was a powerhouse. Not only is this a fast-paced thriller, but it provides fascinating facts about espionage and corporate security. Each section defines an espionage term, which is then exemplified in the story line. I was shocked to learn about how lax corporate security can be, permitting access to password-protected PCs and locked offices and file cabinets. Even badge readers and biometric scanners can be circumvented. This is definitely worth reading, but be sure to schedule it for when you have some spare time, because once you start it you will have trouble putting it down.

Eileen Rieback

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Real Deal
Review: If you have a life planned for the next seven hours of so, DO NOT pick up Joseph Finder's "Paranoia". This is truly a page-turner on caliber with Grisham's "The Firm" - a high adrenalin corporate thriller that is credible as much as it is pure entertainment. "Paranoia" is the story of Adam Cassidy, a 20-something slacker working in the fictional Wyatt Telecom. After impersonating a company officer and hacking the corporate network to stage a lavish retirement party for a loading dock worker, Cassidy is caught and is given a choice: criminal prosecution which will certainly lead to a long prison term, or work for Wyatt founder/CEO Nick Wyatt - loosely modeled, it seems, after Oracle's Larry Ellison - as a spy inside Wyatt arch rival Trion Systems. As a Trion employee, Cassidy for the first time is productive and flourishes in his new surroundings. He also begins to develop loyalties to the new company and to Trion's immensely popular folk-hero CEO, "Jock" Goddard. Inevitably, he is torn between the forced servitude/espionage of the arrogant and evil Wyatt and allegiance to father figure Goddard (sharing some characteristics with Intel's Andy Grove).

The result is a well-paced thriller, with crisp dialog and a tight, unencumbered plot. Finder has researched his topic well, capturing the politics of corporate America and getting it right on the technological details as well. Expect some twists along the way, which Finder sets up with subtle hints leading to a clever and satisfying climax. I found Reed Arvin's recently released and critically acclaimed "The Last Goodbye" muddled and sloppy in comparison to "Paranoia". Not since "DaVinci Code" have I had such a nard time putting down a novel - "Paranoia" is worth your investment!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Rasberry to the reviewer from St. Louis Mo !!!
Review: I really dislike some of the mean reviewers on this site. I think it is sad how they are continually allowed to slam some of these super writers. Shame on all of you jerks! Get a life and stop writing bogus reviews of these books...GEESH!!!

Paranoia:A Novedl by pJoseph Finder is truly the book of fiction to beat this year! Buy it and judge for yourself what makes my man FINDER heads above most writers! He is hard to top that's for sure !!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Very well Written
Review: Adam Cassidy just wanted to let a retiring friend that worked on the docks of the same company that Adam worked for (in the cubicle-farms). He stole funds from his company, Wyatt Telecommunications, and used them to throw the party of the year. Corporate security finds out about this as quickly as you would expect (in the middle of it). They give him an option; prison for almost a lifetime (at their rough guess, when he is 81 years old or so) or spying on their largest competitor, Trion Systems, who they know has something huge up their sleeves.

As you probably have already guessed, he chose spying. They trained him with weeks of grueling studying, field work, experience for high-tech gadgets (one, the Keyghost, a real gadget that attaches to the keyboard wire to the computer and records everything typed in that computer), etc.

He is placed in a medium-level area, but his training quickly moves him through the ranks until he is actually the assistant to the President and CEO, Augustine "Jock" Goddard.

Adam sneaks around the company gathering as much data as he can so he won't get squished by his real boss, Nick Wyatt, CEO of Wyatt Telecommunications. He soon comes to really feel that Jock is a father to him, and he falls in love with an employee in the project he is spying on, which makes his emotions get in the way of duty.

I am probably one of the hardest book reviewer out of all the teenagers I know, I read a book critically... and very few would I even give a 4/5 star rating... but the top ones, that really keep you up at night wanting to know what's next, and get you thinking really deserve all the stars. Joseph Finder is definitely a writer on the same level with great novelists Michael Crichton, James F. David, Isaac Asimov, and Ray Bradbury.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Difficult to put down
Review: Paranoia is a fast-paced, enjoyable read from the very beginning. There is action, excitement, intrigue, and frequent plot twists. In the story itself, underachiever Adam Cassidy finds himself presented with an offer that he cannot refuse. Adam quickly is in the middle of a complicated industrial espionage scheme between two high-tech companies. As the story unfolds and the pressure increases, Adam is increasingly conflicted.....clearly in a damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don't situation. Although some of the action is predictable, confusion, uncertainty, and surprise is the general rule, thus driving the reader to want to read "just one more chapter." Character development is strong, adding significantly to the plot and subplots. Although not as good as Finder's "High Crimes," I strongly recommend Paranoia. It should prove to be an entertaining read.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Thin is In
Review: Although the sales certainly haven't lived up to the hype, I thought I'd try this one anyway because of the many 5-star reviews here on Amazon, which I've always found very helpful in the past. BIG mistake! This book is anorexic - where is the content? where is the joy of the written word? where is the interest, creativity, heart? Honestly - where is the author? I couldn't keep my mind in the story for wondering at the thinness of the craft and the blatantly formulaic plot and characters.

It's one thing to want an easy, entertaining read for a plane flight. But there's more to a third reading of "Skymall" than there is to this one.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Thiller will engage you right from page 1!
Review: I enjoyed PARANOIA, the latest thriller by Joseph Finder . . . this
is a novel about a 26 year-old low level employee at a high-tech
corporation who hates his job . . . when he manipulates the system
to do a favor for a friend, he finds himself charged with a crime . . . he
is then given a choice: prison or become a spy in the headquarters
of the corporation's chief competitor.

When he chooses the latter option, his life changes dramatically . . . all
of a sudden, he becomes rich and even gets to date the girl of his
dreams . . . his life is suddenly perfect--or is it?

I got sucked into this tale from page 1 . . . it is very quick reading, and
I didn't want it to end . . . that said, the ending--while a bit abrupt--still
was satisfying . . . and left me wanting to read other books by Finder.

In particular, I liked his use of dialogue . . . at times, it was snappy;
at other times, it was memorable . . . among the passages that
caught my attention were the following:

* "Then I assume smoking's out of the question."

"Wrong," she said. "It's a filthy, disgusting habit, and it indicates
a lack of self-control, but there are other considerations. Standing
around in the smoking area is an excellent way to cross-pollinate,
connect with people in different units, obtain useful intelligence.
Now, about your handshake." She shook her head. "You blew
it. Hiring decisions are made in the first five seconds--at the
handshake. Anyone who tells you anything else is lying to you.
You get the job with the handshake, and then the rest of
the job interview you fight to keep it, not to lose it. Since I'm a
woman, you went easy on me. Don't. Be firm, do it hard, and
hold--"

I smiled impishly, cut in: "The last woman who told me that . . . " I
noticed she'd frozen in midsentence."

* "Of course it's a trick question [why the main character was
interviewing for a job]. Job interviews are minefields, my friend. You have
to 'admit' to weaknesses, but you must never tell them anything
derogatory. So you confess to being too faithful a husband, too loving
a father." She did the Adam-voice again: "Sometimes I get so
comfortable with one software application that I don't explore others.
Or: sometimes when little things bother me, I don't always speak up,
because I figure most things tend to blow over. You don't complain
enough! Or how about this: I tend to get really absorbed in a project,
so I sometimes put in long hours, too long, because I love doing
them, doing them right. Maybe I work on things more than is
necessary. Get it? They'll be creaming, Adam."

* "He was a sweet kid," Goodard suddenly said, so quietly that at first
I thought I'd imagined it. I stopped moving. His voice was low and
hoarse and faint, not much louder than a whisper. "An athlete, tall
and broad in the chest, like you. And he had a . . . . gift for
happiness. When he walked into a room, you just felt the mood
lifting. He made people feel good. He was beautiful, and he was kind,
and there was this--this spark in his eyes. He slowly raised his
head and stared into the middle distance. "Even when he was
a baby, he almost never cried or fussed or . . . "


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