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It's a dangerous world full of dangerous people. Yet Jake Savage and his A-team are there to keep things in check. In Live Wire, the first in the Jake Savage series, Jake and Dakota square off against Colombian carteleros, and Panamanian despots, whipping around the globe in a dazzling array of aircraft, ready to do battle at a moment's notice. Set in a time when the global security situation is undergoing significant and perilous shifts, Wesinger's novel takes the reader from the hallowed halls and top-secret boardrooms of the Pentagon to the rugged beauty of the Zimbabwean bush, narrating this riveting tale with an insider's flair for detail and nuance. Jake's highly specialized elite A-Team takes on missions no one else can. The story opens with a rescue operation from a Panamanian prison, but then the plot expands in deeper, darker territory, when, amidst shifting, shady alliances between the team's rivals, it is discovered that the Ochocha cartel, has marked Jake and his colleagues for death.
The teaching program of Frank J. Reilly consisted of communicating an accumulation of knowledge and skills beginning with the elementary and building to the complex. He primarily taught the craft of drawing and then painting the nude figure. Each step in his teaching followed logically upon the step that had been previously taught. This is an honest account of the substance of his teaching as experienced by the author, Doug Higgins, during the four years or so that he was his student and monitor during the 1960s.
In "Secrets of the Tin Man," Skeeter Wesinger reactivates his covert crew of swashbuckling patriots for another high-stakes, thriller across - and above - the globe. Jake and his team find new villains and dangers that will whirl them through an exotic travelogue including Monaco, Siberia, New Zealand, Mexico, Colombia, Djibouti, Spain, coast-to-coast United States - and the upper atmosphere at hypersonic-speed! Along the way, Skeeter weaves in deliciously unexpectedly character developments and plot twists, including revelation of the secret of the "Tin Man" (no spoiler alert needed here!) As an added bonus, Skeeter lightly sprinkles in technical details of the hardware and software that makes our most sophisticated whizzbang weaponry work - or in some case's not! For Skeeter fans, "Tin Man" will deliver the familiar characters, fast pace, exotic locales, technical insight, and action-thrills they've come to expect. For new-comers seeking a good, fast, escapist read, this could be just their e-ticket!
This story describes many incidents in the life of Charles McAvoy his upbringing in small-town America,his experiences in World War II and the Korean War, his love of flying, and his rise in the ranks of one of the largest and most successful enterprises in American corporate history and the triumphs and tragedies within his family. It is the story of one life that epitomizes what is now being referred to as "The Greatest Generation."
Richard Blackman was chased off a course by a lion. Despite being blind, Charles Boswell shot a round of 81. An errant drive by Mathieu Boya resulted in the destruction of the entire air force of Benin. Otto Bucher shot a hole-in-one at age ninety-nine. Mobster Al Capone shot himself in the foot during a round of golf. Tommy Bolt was fined 250 for repeatedly breaking wind during the 1959 Memphis Open. While leading the 1934 U.S. Open, Bobby Cruickshank knocked himself out when he threw his club into the air in celebration of a good shot. At the 1973 Sea Pines Heritage Classic, Hale Irwin hit a.