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Found Money | 
enlarge | Manufacturer: HarperCollins e-books Category: EBooks
List Price: $7.50 Buy New: $6.00 You Save: $1.50 (20%)
Avg. Customer Rating: 31 reviews Sales Rank: 24265
Format: Kindle Book Media: Kindle Edition Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 480
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 ASIN: B0015KGWYM
Publication Date: March 18, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Product Description A young woman finds $200,000 in cash in a cardboard box delivered to her door. A man inherits a fortune from a father who died "penniless." Amy Parkens and Ryan Duffy have never met, but they are about to, as each discovers that found money can be a godsend -- or a nightmare. Amy Parkens is a struggling single mother forced to abandon a career in astronomy for a practical computer job. She feels condemned to long hours, low pay, and no time to spend with her daughter. Then an unmarked package arrives. There's no card, no note, no return address. Someone has simply sent her a small fortune. Amy has no idea who -- or why. She only knows her dead-end life has changed forever. Though she longs to keep the cash, Amy fears a mistake, a setup, or even a possible connection to her mother's mysterious suicide twenty years earlier. She has to find the source. But when she tries to look her gift horse in the mouth, someone snatches the money away -- quickly, violently. Ryan Duffy is a decent, responsible man, a small-town physician from the plains of southeastern Colorado. Like Amy, Ryan has recently found unexpected wealth. His father's estate is worth more than Ryan could ever have imagined -- millions more. Truth is, Dad was a hardworking electrician for forty years. But in his attic, he hid a fortune. The Duffy family has been guarding this secret. Was it extortion, burglary, or some other shocking crime? And now that Ryan has the money, what should he do? Painful as it is, Ryan is drawn to his father's dark past. Amy, on the same desperate quest for answers, soon crosses Ryan's path. Their search takes them through a labyrinth of deception and blackmail, leading to a man of unfathomable power. Yet the past is not what it appears. Heinous crimes touched their families years ago. Amy and Ryan must solve a treacherous puzzle to learn why the true victims never came forward, why the real wrongdoers went unpunished, and why certain people would kill to keep their secrets.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 26 more reviews...
Gosh, NO, I Really Didn't Like This. Read Why. October 1, 2007 The initial premise was great. You find a fortune in your attic, no one knows about it, it's in small bills, been there for years, not counterfeit, no one's looking for it, you can do whatever you wish with it. After my initial disgust with the hero's (hero?) over zealous need to make sure this money is "untainted", that he really has a legal right to it, I began to develop an interest in the somewhat complicated plot, even though the writing was not stellar. But the ending pissed me off. Totally unrealistic shoot um up scene with way too many contrived twists in the plot. I didn't buy it; I didn't like it. I was sorry I invested so much time for such a lame payoff. I had expected something more satisfying.
One of Grippando's best... March 26, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is a twisted story, but WELL WORTH the read, you won't want to put it down from the minute you start it to the very last page. Excellent. So many previews have already gone through the story plot, so I won't repeat...just get the book...it's a great read!
Wow!!! August 2, 2006 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
What a novel!
An expertly wirtten tale that keeps you guessing on a real roller-coaster ride the whole way through. Grippando writes intelligently, without too much insider law jargon.
This was my second Grippando adventure and it will certainly NOT be my last. One reviewer wrote how stupid the premise for the story was, saying in real life people wouldn't care where the money came from or why. Well thats rediculous. You mean to tell me if $200,000 came in the mail today in a myserious unarked box that you wouldn't bat an eye to see why it arrived? Besides, its a story, and Grippando take the ball and runs with it superbly.
I really had no complaints and would reccomend this to anyone.
Perhaps I have become too jaded... June 25, 2005 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
Having read a number of Grippando's books, I found this to be the least credible plot line of all. Why did everyone need to find out where the money came from? And what good did it do them in the end? Let's be real here...If someone handed you $200,000 or more, would you really need to know the why's and wherefore's in order to enjoy it? Or you could be stupid like the characters in this book and then what will you end up with? I am glad that this is one of Grippando's earlier works because his newer novels are much better than this. Try "Last to Die" or "A King's Ransom".
Ending have not got what it takes October 30, 2004 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Departing from a original idea Grippando created a very well conceived suspensed novel with a string of events carefully developed Two strong characters appear in the plot, with lives destined to clash The main one is Ryan, a doctor destined to a confortable material life that he forfeited in exchange for his professionals services in a small rural community for the despair of his divorced golddigging wife The other is, Amy a talented tough minded would be astronomer young woman who is also a single mother that works in charge of the system network of a Colorado middle size law firm whose top manager also had a relation with Ryan's father past Both of them have received a huge sum of money from the late Ryan's father, a former blue collar worker, and that is where the mystery begins surrounded by tales of blackmailing, rape, a powerful tycoon and safeboxs and accounts in sleazy offshore banks The story is very well written and compelling all the way to a lackluster ending which might have been far better had the author thought a bit more, looks like he did not want to commit to a last brain push.
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