You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
From the hell of Berlin as it fell at the end of WW2, follow the trail of a treasure of Nazi SS gold bullion to Indochina. Smuggled out of Berlin, as it fell to the Russian Red Army in 1945 by 5 young SS officers, who end up joining the French Foreign Legion, the gold is lost in South Vietnam. In 1968, after he is given a map to find the lost SS treasure, Mike Bennett returns to South Vietnam to search for the lost gold and his lost love. To succeed in this mission Bennett must fight the enemy from the North and battle the demons of the past to find the SS Treasure.
In 1968, Saigon and the surrounding jungles of South Vietnam were the deadliest place on Earth. For a young Australian Soldier, Mike Bennett, fear had no place in the hell that was the Vietnam war. On a mission to find a huge diamond, The Angel’s Breath, Bennett, together with two fearless, misfit soldiers, a French mercenary and two American CIA agents, venture where no sane men should ever dare walk; a jungle controlled by a criminally insane North Vietnamese Army Officer. Bennett soon learns, no risk is too great, when the lives of the people around him are on the line. In fact, he is prepared to go to hell and back for mateship, love and For An Angel's Breath.
None
None
Larkin Berryman Toler was born 22 September 1869 in Mounds, Illinois. His parents were Haywood Toler and Sarah Ann Clark. He married Euphemia Emma Dora Peacock (1871-1940), daughter of Ansel Peacock and Elizabeth Jones, 21 February 1891 in Dublin, Texas. They had eight children. Larkin died in 1944 in Garland, Texas. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in Texas.
Carved from central Comancheria, Erath (EE-rath) County was created by stock raisers and settlers with little to lose but hopes and dreams. Bisected by Grand Prairie and Western Cross Timbers, this is where East Texas ends and West Texas begins. The Bosque and Paluxy Rivers welcomed ranchers, farmers, millers, and ginners. Rustlers, deserters, train robbers, vigilantes, lawmen, and Texas Rangers soon followed. Faith, education, life, and death cultivated villages with churches, schools, stores, and cemeteries in walking distance. Bridges, roads, and railways meant the life or death of a township. This volume commemorates the people, places, and events of lost communities that made the "Cowbo...