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North of the River is a exciting and graphic tale of a young Army officer's first tour of duty in the Korean DMZ of 1969. The fact that a low grade war was being fought in Korea at that time is generally unknown to most of the American people. This story provides a fascinating and revealing tale, full of humor, adventure, romance, and an accurate picture of military life and life as a Red Cross "Doughnut Dolly" in this little know theater. It moves quickly through a thirteen month tour until the reader crashes head on into the surprise, action filled conclusion.
North of the River is a exciting and graphic tale of a young Army officer's first tour of duty in the Korean DMZ of 1969. The fact that a low grade war was being fought in Korea at that time is generally unknown to most of the American people. This story provides a fascinating and revealing tale, full of humor, adventure, romance, and an accurate picture of military life and life as a Red Cross "Doughnut Dolly" in this little know theater. It moves quickly through a thirteen month tour until the reader crashes head on into the surprise, action filled conclusion.
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A sunny outing on a beautiful Hawaiian island unexpectedly leads a retired Special Forces officer and his lovely wife into a web of Wall Street stock manipulations, stolen drug formulas, kidnapping, and violent murders. As the culprits’ trail moves from the lush golf courses of Hawaii to the snow capped ski slopes of Aspen, Colorado, Cap Pennington, joins forces with his former Green Beret executive officer to find the men they believe are responsible for the crimes. But just as the trail seems to lead nowhere, the desperate perpetrators lash out with an unexpected ferocity and cruelty that turns the hunters into the hunted and forever alters the lives of everyone involved. This fast paced thriller captures the reader early and never lets go.
A unique memoir in which a young adventurer from colonial Rhodesia charms his way around the world, sleeping in stately homes and public toilets, smuggling drugs across several borders and losing a $50 million fortune to the CIA, before settling into a stellar banking career. Looking back on a life well lived as he faces terminal illness, the author swears that the key to his success was his gruelling training as a Buddhist monk in a snow-bound Japanese monastery.
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