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Wheels Within Wheels (The LaNague Federation Book 2) Kindle Edition
A monstrous conspiracy is brewing against the LaNague Federation and the freedoms its guarantees to its member planets—at least that’s what Old Pete says. He's come to the offices of Interstellar Business Advisors, a firm he co-founded more than half a century before, to enlist the aid of its current CEO, Josephine Finch. Dubious at first, Jo humors the old man by promising to look into the matter.
She does not have to look far before she is convinced that something is afoot, something that will not bear the light of day, something involving a revolutionary means of interstellar travel. And when one of the trails leads to the planet Jebinose, site of her father’s bizarre death, Jo finds herself personally involved.
She is soon pitted against one of the shrewdest, most devious minds in Federation politics, and against a wild-card psi who might well destroy them both. But what Josephine Finch begins, she finishes.
Wheels Within Wheels follows her on a course that involves five planets and three alien races. Before she is through she will bring the galaxy’s largest corporation to its knees, avenge her father’s death, abort a cynical political plot, and start an interstellar war.
Don’t mess with Josephine Finch.
(Bonus LaNague short stories: "The Man with the Anteater" and "Higher Centers" - plus a foreword by the author)
"You’re whirled off into an interstellar conspiracy plotted by a Watergatish bunch of baddies, with industrial espionage, psi-murder, and extortion as sidelights. Finally the wheels all mesh. If you’ve caught the cleverly planted clues, you close the book with all the satisfaction of a good Agatha Christie. Viva la Federation!" Library Journal
"A fast-paced, well-written story that holds reader interest from the first chapter. Since WHEELS WITHIN WHEELS is blurbed as 'A Novel of the LaNague Federation,' I imagine Wilson is going to make a regular series out of this. If he can keep up the quality he reached in the first two novels, it will be quite an impressive series." Future Retrospective
"Mr. Wilson is that rare find among modern SF novelists, a writer in the classic style of Asimov, Tubb, Heinlein, Pohl and Kornbluth – especially the last two, whose 'Space Merchants' this book most closely resembles. Easy to follow, hard to put down." Manchester Evening News (UK)
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateMarch 16, 2010
- File size1.0 MB
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This option includes 5 books.
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Editorial Reviews
About the Author
F. Paul Wilson is the New York Times bestselling author of horror, adventure, medical thrillers, science fiction, and virtually everything in between. He is perhaps best known for the Repairman Jack series, which includes Ground Zero, The Tomb, and Fatal Error. He is also the author of the Adversary cycle, including The Keep, and a young adult series featuring the teenage Jack. Wilson has won the Prometheus Award, the Bram Stoker Award, the Inkpot Award from the San Diego Comic-Con, and the Lifetime Achievement Award of the Horror Writers of America, among other honors. He lives in Wall, New Jersey.
Product details
- ASIN : B003CP14GO
- Publisher : Wilsongs
- Accessibility : Learn more
- Publication date : March 16, 2010
- Language : English
- File size : 1.0 MB
- Simultaneous device usage : Unlimited
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 192 pages
- ISBN-13 : 978-0976654438
- Page Flip : Enabled
- Book 2 of 5 : The LaNague Federation
- Best Sellers Rank: #621,672 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #28,653 in Science Fiction (Kindle Store)
- #38,151 in Science Fiction (Books)
- #143,949 in Literature & Fiction (Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

I was born toward the end of the Jurassic Period and raised in New Jersey where I misspent my youth playing with matches, poring over Uncle Scrooge and E.C. comics, reading Lovecraft, Matheson, Bradbury, and Heinlein, listening to Chuck Berry and Alan Freed, and watching Soupy Sales and horror movies. I sold my first story in the Cretaceous Period and have been writing ever since. (Even that dinosaur-killer asteroid couldn't stop me.)
I've written in just about every genre - science fiction, fantasy, horror, young adult, a children's Christmas book (with a monster, of course), medical thrillers, political thrillers, even a religious thriller (long before that DaVinci thing). So far I've got about 55 books and 100 or so short stories under my name in 24 languages.
I guess I'm best known for the Repairman Jack series which ran 23 novels. Jack is out to pasture now, but I may bring him back if the right story comes along.
THE KEEP, THE TOMB, HARBINGERS, BY THE SWORD, and NIGHTWORLD all appeared on the New York Times Bestsellers List. WHEELS WITHIN WHEELS won the first Prometheus Award in 1979; THE TOMB received the Porgie Award from The West Coast Review of Books. My novelette "Aftershock" received the 1999 Bram Stoker Award for short fiction. DYDEETOWN WORLD was on the young adult recommended reading lists of the American Library Association and the New York Public Library, among others (God knows why). I received the prestigious Inkpot Award from San Diego ComiCon and the Pioneer Award from the RT Booklovers Convention. I'm listed in the 50th anniversary edition of Who's Who in America. (That plus $3 will buy you a coffee at Starbuck's.)
My novel THE KEEP was made into a visually striking but otherwise incomprehensible movie (screenplay and direction by Michael Mann) from Paramount in 1983. My original teleplay "Glim-Glim" first aired on Monsters. An adaptation of my short story "Menage a Trois" was part of the pilot for The Hunger series that debuted on Showtime in July 1997.
And then there's the epic saga of the Repairman Jack film. After 20 years in development hell with half a dozen writers and at least a dozen scripts, Beacon Films has decided that "Repairman Jack" might be better suited for TV than theatrical films. (We'll see how that works out.)
I've done a few collaborations too: with Steve Spruill on NIGHTKILL, A NECESSARY END with Sarah Pinborough, THE PROTEUS CURE with Tracy Carbone, and the Nocturnia series with Thomas Moneleone. Back in the 1990s, Matthew J. Costello and I did world design, characters, and story arcs for Sci-Fi Channel's FTL NewsFeed, a daily newscast set 150 years in the future. An FTL NewsFeed was the first program broadcast by the new channel when it launched in September 1992. We took over scripting the Newsfeeds (the equivalent of a 4-1/2 hour movie per year) in 1994 and continued until its cancellation in December 1996.
We did script and design for MATHQUEST WITH ALADDIN (Disney Interactive - 1997) with voices by Robin Williams and Jonathan Winters, and the same for The Interactive DARK HALF for Orion Pictures, based on the Stephen King novel, but this project was orphaned when MGM bought Orion. (It's officially vaporware now.) We did two novels together (MIRAGE and DNA WARS) and even wrote a stageplay, "Syzygy," which opened in St. Augustine, Florida, in March, 2000.
I'm tired of talking about myself, so I'll close by saying that I live and work at the Jersey Shore where I'm usually pounding away on a new novel and haunting eBay for strange clocks and Daddy Warbucks memorabilia. (No, we don't have a cat.)
Customer reviews
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- Reviewed in the United States on March 18, 2014F. Paul Wilson takes the best of libertarian values and mixes them with exciting plots and memorable characters. Though this is a sequel, it can be read and enjoyed on its own. This novel won the 1979 Prometheus Award.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2012Very well written story. Would recommend this to everyone. I've enjoyed this author for many years. You will have a great adventure with this story.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 11, 2020I'm reading through The LaNague Federation series in the recommended reading order rather than original publication date, so I read An Enemy of the State first, even though that was published a couple of years after Wheels Within Wheels.
The difference in when they were written really shows, as Wheels Within Wheels is a significantly weaker book than Enemy.
One of the problems with Wheels Within Wheels is it suffers from Ayn Rand Syndrome--there are too many parts in the book in which characters mouth paragraph after paragraph of exposition a la the in/famous John Galt speech.
This was especially evident and annoying in the final chapter of the book in which all of the main plot points are wrapped up with character exposition.
You can definitely see how Wilson grew as a writer between the time he wrote this and his later books.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 10, 2001I picked up a copy of this book at the library. It has an excellent plot. Well written and fast moving. I highly recommend this novel and all of Wilson's Lanague Confederation books.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 8, 2008This was a nice read.
But... I don't see it as a strong continuation of a series.
It is more of a sideline that takes place in the future regarding the first book.
If you're a fan you will probably enjoy it.
Just don't make the assumption it going to further the first book in a deeply meaningful way.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 22, 2010Another early Wilson book, and this one is in many ways the exact inverse of Healer (The LaNague Federation, Book 3) - it has an intriguing story and an interesting world, but characters so thin they're barely present. Wheels Within Wheels is the middle book of Wilson's very loose LaNague trilogy, so it has the advantage of a world already constructed to play around in. And its labyrinthine plotting - which involves an effort to bring down the federation, a long-dead father who may have been murdered, a strange alien world, and lots and lots of libertarian thinking - makes for an intriguing story, but it's hard to care all that much when the characters have almost no personality whatsoever. Still, it's worth remembering that this is an early work for Wilson, and you can see him trying out different ideas here and experimenting. In the end, though, it's only really interesting for fans; new readers should definitely start elsewhere.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 8, 2008Sequel to Enemy of the State. I am a huge fan of F. Paul Wilson, and I enjoyed Enemy of the State, but I started to lose interest a little bit with this more complicated followup.
Top reviews from other countries
- Bent AReviewed in the United Kingdom on January 25, 2013
4.0 out of 5 stars If you are interested in both science fiction and the politics of freedom
If you are, then this novel should be of great interest to you. Written as a mystery novel, instead of as an intense action driven story. The writer explanes things really good. He obviously knows his stuff, both the science fiction part and the part explaining libertarian politics and ideology, and especially how the bureaucratic state functions - or rather dysfunctions - with its lust and call for "order" as a means of achieving power over you and me, making all of us into "state slaves". A somewhat "Austrian" approach when it comes to economics, it seems. Easy to read and understand. Wilson's style is different than other libertarian si-fi writers I have encountered.
- ASwannReviewed in Canada on May 17, 2018
4.0 out of 5 stars Four Stars
Good series
- the poetReviewed in the United Kingdom on September 3, 2013
4.0 out of 5 stars First rate service.
Having purchased most if not all of his books now everything was as predicted, good speedy service a good read and would recommend it.