14,99 €
inkl. MwSt.

Versandfertig in über 4 Wochen
  • Broschiertes Buch

In the tiny European country of Tantalia, Princess Niobe is being groomed to ascend to the throne. Secretly, however, from the age of sixteen, the Princess has been trained by her martial arts instructor, Gethan, to kill the businessman responsible for her parent's deaths. Once queen, she will have 'sovereign immunity' and be free to kill without prosecution. Niobe strikes, but unbeknownst to her, one of her kills is caught on video and she is identified as an assassin. Her people, however, seem accepting of the idea and of their Queen's unconventional shadowy activities. Then a TV producer…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In the tiny European country of Tantalia, Princess Niobe is being groomed to ascend to the throne. Secretly, however, from the age of sixteen, the Princess has been trained by her martial arts instructor, Gethan, to kill the businessman responsible for her parent's deaths. Once queen, she will have 'sovereign immunity' and be free to kill without prosecution. Niobe strikes, but unbeknownst to her, one of her kills is caught on video and she is identified as an assassin. Her people, however, seem accepting of the idea and of their Queen's unconventional shadowy activities. Then a TV producer comes to her with a novel idea - how about a reality tv show about her next kill? Safe in the knowledge she can't be prosecuted Niobe ponders, and eventually agrees. But there are more questions than answers... for a start - how will the world respond to a sovereign assassin?
Autorenporträt
According to his wife, Robert has spent too much of his life studying. She has a point as he's earned seven tertiary qualifications. Robert has degrees in psychology, sociology, biology and education, all of which inspire his writing. He lives in Melbourne with his wife and two children. He likes writing stories which shift the perspective of the reader and make use of scientific concepts. Robert is mildly kosmemophobic. When he was in high school, a dare escalated a little too quickly and Robert made the state final in an interpretive dance competition.