Ace of Aces Books
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A Ranger's personal perspective on D-Day takes you thereReview Date: 2006-08-07
an another view on ranger's D-Day and days afterReview Date: 2000-02-29
A MUST READ PERSONAL ACCOUNT OF WWIIReview Date: 2000-03-22
They Were HeroesReview Date: 2000-02-21
Thanks from the heart. Howard G. Mann
A very important memoir of WW2Review Date: 2000-01-05
Buy these small press WW2 memoirs now, as they really go up in price when the go OOP.
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Saint Saga #15Review Date: 2008-10-11
Set shortly after the repeal of Prohibition, this tale of revenge is one of the grimmest, and the certainly the most violent, of all the Saint stories, so that when it was filmed, it was considerably toned down (and all hint of corruption in the New York judiciary removed, of course).
Nevertheless, most Saint fans, including myself, seem to regard it as one of the best (as witness the other reviews). To take just one example: as a synopsis of all the previous Saint books -- vital, if new readers are to understand the story -- the prologue (which takes the form of a letter to the NYPD from Simon's old adversary Chief Inspector Teal of Scotland Yard) is one of the most original ideas I've seen.
Charteris knew New York well, along with its denizens and their culture and language. The characters are drawn with great verve, especially Inspector John Fernack, the various members of the gangland hierarchy, and the mysterious Fay Edwards, who falls in love with Simon at the same time as she is helping him to kill just about everyone she knows.
Above all, Charteris shows himself once again a first-rate story-teller. Gripping from start to finish.
P.S. For a list of -- and discussion of -- all Charteris's Saint books, see my So You'd Like To... Guide.
Saint Saga #15Review Date: 2008-10-11
Set shortly after the repeal of Prohibition, this tale of revenge is one of the grimmest, and the certainly the most violent, of all the Saint stories, so that when it was filmed, it was considerably toned down (and all hint of corruption in the New York judiciary removed, of course).
Nevertheless, most Saint fans, including myself, seem to regard it as one of the best (as witness the other reviews). To take just one example: as a synopsis of all the previous Saint books -- vital, if new readers are to understand the story -- the prologue (which takes the form of a letter to the NYPD from Simon's old adversary Chief Inspector Teal of Scotland Yard) is one of the most original ideas I've seen.
Charteris knew New York well, along with its denizens and their culture and language. The characters are drawn with great verve, especially Inspector John Fernack, the various members of the gangland hierarchy, and the mysterious Fay Edwards, who falls in love with Simon at the same time as she is helping him to kill just about everyone she knows.
Above all, Charteris shows himself once again a first-rate story-teller. Gripping from start to finish.
P.S. For a list of -- and discussion of -- all Charteris's Saint books, see my So You'd Like To... Guide.
Saint Saga #15Review Date: 2007-07-28
Set shortly after the repeal of Prohibition, this tale of revenge is one of the grimmest, and the certainly the most violent, of all the Saint stories, so that when it was filmed, it was considerably toned down (and all hint of corruption in the New York judiciary removed, of course).
Nevertheless, most Saint fans, including myself, seem to regard it as one of the best (as witness the other reviews). To take just one example: as a synopsis of all the previous Saint books -- vital, if new readers are to understand the story -- the prologue (which takes the form of a letter to the NYPD from Simon's old adversary Chief Inspector Teal of Scotland Yard) is one of the most original ideas I've seen.
Charteris knew New York well, along with its denizens and their culture and language. The characters are drawn with great verve, especially Inspector John Fernack, the various members of the gangland hierarchy, and the mysterious Fay Edwards, who falls in love with Simon at the same time as she is helping him to kill just about everyone she knows.
Above all, Charteris shows himself once again a first-rate story-teller. Gripping from start to finish.
P.S. For a list of -- and discussion of -- all Charteris's Saint books, see my So You'd Like To... Guide.
who is the big fella ?Review Date: 2002-04-10
who is the big fella ?Review Date: 2002-04-10

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Working to Make Dreams a RealityReview Date: 2008-11-06
The situation is pretty standard. The world is now governed by an organization called Pax, who have two goals: remain in power, and violently exterminate any form of resistance, which they see as mainly coming from those few scientists still remaining after a world-wide purge of these individuals in reaction to the 'Great Burn', when satellites were used to rain destruction on most of the world's cities. What makes this book different is how Norton makes this scenario personal, focusing on the brother of one of the last remaining expert biologists, and how his personal efforts help make the grand goal of leaving Earth and its Paxmen and traveling to the stars a real possibility.
There's not much real science here, just the usual hand-waving of force fields and blasters, and almost no hint of the actual technology used to power a starship, but she does use the concept of cold sleep effectively, and touches on another talent that would later be heavily used in her works, a strong empathic (near telepathic) contact with animals. When I first read this book way back when, these concepts were very new and intriguing to me. Reading the book today, these ideas still have power, though not, perhaps, the great thrill they gave me back then, as they have been used by other authors again and again since.
Thematically, the book drives home points about the corrupting effect of power, the blindness that religion (of any type) invokes upon its followers, the need for recognizing any intelligence as worthy of respect and appropriate treatment, and the necessity of having dreams beyond just surviving, themes that Norton would return to in many other books, but quite effectively presented here.
There is some definite dating to this book, as its beginning scenario derives directly from the Cold War, and the shown computer here definitely missed the mark in terms of predicting what would happen in that field. But at the same time, Norton very presciently forecast our first steps into space and exploration of the nearer planets, and our subsequent retreat from that grand frontier. When this book was written (1954), and the conditions that existed then, must be kept in mind while reading.
An excellent adventure, perhaps a little too dated to be classed as top-flight sf, but still well worth the time to read, and a very good example of just what Norton was capable of.
---Reviewed by Patrick Shepherd (hyperpat)
Ad AstraReview Date: 2007-12-30
Andre Norton was a very prolific SFWA Grandmaster that introduced two generations to the wonders of science fiction. This is my personal favorite of all her works and I consider on par with Heinlein's Charles Scribner series also written in the 1950s.
One of her peculiarities was Norton never used the word `Earth' . She habitually used the term `Terra'. But I digress.
In this future `Terra', scientists and engineers are hunted, murdered and enslaved. Terrorists had taken over satellite stations and bombarded the major cities. A charismatic politician arises wanting to take humanity back to a simpler time not so dependent on technology. When he is assassinated, the world's scientists are blamed. The Great Purge results in the hated guild being ruthlessly slaughtered with the survivors driven into exile.
Pax runs the world using the remaining technology to push humanity to a more agrarian model. Think of an entire world run like Cambodia under Pol Pot and you understand what this world is like.
Dalgard Nordis is a member of a scientist family gone into hiding. He escaped as a young boy with his older brother Lars and his family. He and his young, motherless niece Dessie are experts in forest. Dessie is gifted with animals. Dard is gifted with a photographic memory and the chief provider for his family.
Unknown to the others, Lars has been in communication with his former associates. Life on Terra is increasingly difficult for them. They have hidden an experimental spacecraft in a secret base. However they need the critical assistance of Lars Nordis is necessary for the expeditions success.
Unfortunately Pax has become aware of the survivors existence and the clock is ticking. Of course they're successful and they find their home on a distant world. The details are what the story are about and an excellent one it is. It would make an excellent sci-fi thriller movie.
Ad Astra Post ApocalypseReview Date: 2003-05-03
Among the survivors was Arturo Renzi, who had lost his entire family. He began to preach the evils of science and was welcomed as a great leader throughout the world. However, his message was too liberal for some of his followers and he was assassinated, apparently by a Free Scientist. For three days after the assassination, Renzi's followers engaged in a furious purge against scientists and techneers, hunting them down and killing them. Then Saxon Bort, one of Renzi's chief lieutenants, assumed command of the leader's forces and established the tight dictatorship of the Company of Pax.
In this novel, a decade or so later, Dard Nordis is the son of a Scientific family, living with his older brother, Lars, and his niece, Dessie. Lars and Dard, together with Lars' pregnant wife, Kathia, had fled the purge, but the escape had left Lars a twisted cripple and his wife an amnesiac. After Dessie was born, Kathia retreated into her own dream world until her death. Now Dard, Lars, and Dessie live on a farm far from any population center and the only nearby farm is Hew Folley's place. Dard doesn't trust Folley, for he wants their farm. Then one night, a Pax 'copter lands in the snow just before the house and armed Peacemen surround the building. Dard has the others gather food and supplies and sends them down into the cellar, then torches the house. Moving aside some rotting bins, he uncovers a tunnel, sends Dessie ahead, and helps Lars struggle down the passage.
After the Peacemen leave, Lars sends Dard out to leave a packet for his Scientific underground contact, but Dard hears a shot shortly after he drops the packet and runs back to find Folley clutching a squirming Dessie. Dard throws his knife and fatally injures Folley, then discovers that Lars is dead. With no other recourse remaining, Dard and Dessie return to the contact point to wait. Lotta Folley finds them there and gives them food and a scarf for Dessie; Lotta knows that her father is dead, but she recognizes that he was a man full of hate and who liked to hurt people. Besides, Lotta likes Dessie and liked her mother even more; they were the only people that ever treated her as a real person instead of an object. Lotta takes the rifle back to the barn to fool the Peacemen.
When Lars' contact arrives, Dard convinces him to take Dessie and himself back to safety. They spend the night in a cave, but a Pax 'copter is circling the area when they awake. The contact, Sach, leads the Peacemen away so Dard and Dessie can proceed to the next point in their journey. They move away from the cave along a bare ledge as far as they can and then jump into a snow drift on the edge of the woods. Their journey is fairly easy until they reach the river; the ice is too thin to support even Dessie's weight. After looking up and down river, Dard finds only one place that may support them, an arch of ice covered with snow. Dard carries Dessie across, slowly and carefully, then rests for a count of hundred on the other side. Again heading to the peak that marks their goal, Dard hears the 'copter return and throws Dessie and himself into a tangle of bushes. The men in the 'copter rake the bushes with fire. He and Dessie scoot out the other side, but find it to be a wide sweep of open ground.
This novel is another of the author's post-apocalyptic stories, but the emphasis herein is on spaceflight. Mankind had achieved interplanetary flight and was working on interstellar flight when some irrational terrorists destroyed civilization. Other fanatics then ripped up civilization into even smaller pieces and tried to ensure that ignorance would reign forever. The Scientific community, however, was working on a stardrive and that work was continued in hiding.
This story contains several of the characteristic signatures of the author's space adventures, including special talents and aliens, but does not include mutations nor symbiotic animals. This novel shows the beginning of galactic-wide human civilization and Star Rangers shows the ending of that civilization. Of course, some of the other stories may be set in a successor society. This story is definitely a little dated, but it is still a pleasure to read, as is the sequel, Star Born.
Highly recommended for Norton fans and anyone else who enjoys tales of desperate spaceflights to planets around other suns.
-Arthur W. Jordin
Early Norton I wish she'd written laterReview Date: 2004-05-12
The Stars are Ours and Star Born were among the first science fiction books I ever read. Just as a number of other, later reviewers began their SF voyage with these two, so did I. I've read them a number of times since and still enjoy them.
I really wouldn't call this 'juveniles', though young adults will enjoy them too. These books were early in the SF genre and were intended for a general readership. The typify what was going on in SF during the 1950s. In my view it hasn't particulary improved.
The Stars Are Ours!Review Date: 2000-02-05
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"It is because you speak to me that I do not believe in you"Review Date: 1999-11-09
SpellbindingReview Date: 1999-06-03
Classic Herbert MasterpieceReview Date: 2006-12-08
God's originsReview Date: 2000-07-01
Professional Obstructors Meet Supernova Who Just Needs LoveReview Date: 1999-06-19


Focused studying. Photo sign language cards are helpful.Review Date: 2008-11-05
reasonable price, easy to use... intuitive software... try different titlesReview Date: 2008-10-28
Cards and software CD are both good.Review Date: 2008-10-21
INEXPENSIVE TOOL FOR REVIEW - HELPED WITH SEVERAL CLASSES; SOFTWARE SCREENSAVER TEACHES BY OSMOSISReview Date: 2008-08-28
EXCELLENT PRODUCT!Review Date: 2008-08-07

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Focused studying. Photo sign language cards are helpful.Review Date: 2008-11-05
reasonable price, easy to use... intuitive software... try different titlesReview Date: 2008-10-28
Cards and software CD are both good.Review Date: 2008-10-22
IMPROVED VOCABULARYReview Date: 2008-09-04
INEXPENSIVE TOOL FOR REVIEW - HELPED WITH SEVERAL CLASSES; SOFTWARE SCREENSAVER TEACHES BY OSMOSISReview Date: 2008-08-28

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This is a cool funny book!!Review Date: 2003-11-27
Loved it!Review Date: 2001-10-29
Extraordinary!!Review Date: 2001-05-23
Extraordinary!!Review Date: 2001-05-23
Ace: The House PigReview Date: 2000-05-30

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The CathedralsReview Date: 2006-11-06
God is Good!!Review Date: 1999-09-28
A great insight into America's Best-Loved Gospel Quartet!Review Date: 2000-04-18
It's too short!Review Date: 1999-11-22
Definitely a must-read book for all who love the CathedralsReview Date: 1999-09-15

Collectible price: $12.00

Not Free SF ReaderReview Date: 2007-09-25
He lands what is basically a pet shop job dealing with exotic animals, who turn out to be far more than they seem. This leads to a dog and his boy sort of escapades, or the other way around.
A solid readReview Date: 2007-06-01
I very much enjoyed Troy's plight through a place that's not exactly friendly to his type and how he grew as a man throughout the story.
A cats-eye view of KorwarReview Date: 2002-07-05
Despite their protection, however, Korwar isn't untouched. During the great war between the Council and Confederation governments (its aftermath appears in several books, such as DARK PIPER), the capital city of Tikil became the site of a refugee camp. After the war, those whose worlds were gone, whether destroyed or traded away at the peace table, had nowhere else to go, so the refugee camp became the Dipple, an unofficial 3rd face of Tikil making an ugly contrast to the expensive haunts of tourists or even the working city of the spaceport and warehouse district. The Dipple is a perennial problem, and CATSEYE follows Troy Horan, brought to this sterile warren as a youngster from the plains of Norden. There are only three options open to a Dipple-dweller: attempting to join the Thieves' Guild (as Ziantha of FORERUNNER FORAY escaped), signing on as indentured labor for a frontier world (as Niall of JUDGEMENT ON JANUS did), or scraping by without sub-citizenship by competing in the very tight casual labor market, as Horan does. Consequently, while the protagonists of FORERUNNER FORAY and JUDGEMENT ON JANUS also came from the Dipple, Troy Horan's story is the first to concentrate on Tikil and Korwar - the other tales leave the planet early in the story.
On the morning the story opens, Troy has incredible luck - the assigner has a job for someone with "knowledge of animals", and Troy's reply that he has that of a Norden herd rider lands him indefinite employment at Kyger's pet shop, which provides exotic pets as status symbols for the rich. Troy's initial worries about the decade separating him from any contact with animals aren't a problem - his initial work assignment to help retrieve some new acquisitions from the port lengthens when an attempted hijack en route puts a full-time Kyger employee temporarily out of action.
But why would anyone try to hijack a shipment of exotic animals bound for a life as pets - even as pets of the Gentle Fem San duk Var, rich and influential though she is? Delivering a fussel hawk and accompanying its first hunting expedition with a Ranger of Korwar (and giving us our first glimpse not only of Korwar's huge unspoiled nature preserves, but of the mysterious Forerunner ruins of Ruhkarv) leaves him with an impression that Korwar's guardians are taking an unusual interest in what is, after all, only a pet shop. After all, it's not *illegal* to convince credulous rich people that their little darlings can't survive without special diets, available from Kyger's. :)
Then the routine of delivering special pet food to a Sattor Commander's beloved kinkajou is disrupted by murder - and Troy covers the kinkajou's odd behavior with a plausible story for the police. He finds himself wondering just how intelligent these animals are - and whether he should ally himself with Kyger, who may provide a permanent escape from the Dipple, or with a certain cats-eye view of the world.
(Ruhkarv, and the disastrous fate of the last archeological team ever allowed in the place, are mentioned in some of Norton's other works - DREAD COMPANION mentions it in passing, while a Zacathan scholar in BROTHER TO SHADOWS attempts an experiment with a revised version of the device that brought final disaster to the Ruhkarv team - but CATSEYE provides more information about Ruhkarv than any other story to date.)
Working TogetherReview Date: 2007-09-22
In this novel, ten year later, Troy Horan has only his wide Range Master belt and a few memories to remind him of Norden. Now he is working as a casual laborer in Tikil. One morning, he is offered a job by the mechanical assigner and accepts it. Today he will escape the Dipple for a few hours.
Troy reports for work at Kyger's, a purveyor of extraordinary pets. On his first day, he frustrates an attempt to steal a pair of Terran cats. Supervisor Zul -- a full-blooded Bushman -- is wounded in the attempt and Kyger offers Troy a seven day contract to fill in for the injured man.
During the incident, Troy receives a warning in mindspeech from the cats. Later, he approaches their cage and exchanges a few thoughts. He conceals these communications from his employer and co-workers since he is not really sure what has happened.
Troy has an affinity for animals and does especially well with the fussel hawk, a hunting bird from Norden. He is asked to accompany a customer into the wild to prove the bird's qualities. He will spend three days in the company of Rerne, a high ranking member of the Hunter Clans.
Before this excursion, Troy is sent to a hillside villa to deliver special food for a pet kinkajou owned by Commander Varan Di. Since the Commander had just been murdered, the patrollers warn off his flitter, but allow him to continue after he explains his errand. As he is approaching the villa, the pet runs away from a patroller carrying it out of the building and leaps into Troy's arms.
The patrollers are upset at finding the pet rummaging through the Commander's papers. Troy points out that the kinkajou is a very imitative animal and his probably copying his master's habitual routine. While he is talking to the patrollers, the kinkajoy is pleading with him in mindspeech to take it away from the estate. Eventually, the patrollers tell him to return the pet to Kyger's shop and they fly away.
In this story, Troy finds that a pair of Terran foxes can also talk to him in mindspeech. He even overhears a conversation between the animals and their master. He begins to suspect Kyger of some form of espionage. Then Kyger is murdered and Zul tries to kill these animals. Troy steals a flitter and flees into the wilderness with the five Terran animals.
Troy and the animals are followed by Kyger's associates and the flitter is forced down in the 'accursed place' of Ruhkarv. Now they are hunted not only by Zul and his men, but also by the rangers of the Hunter Clans. They travel deep within the alien ruins and find much to fear therein.
This story is a precursor to the Beast Master series. Although Fors has mental communications with the great hunting cat Lura in Star Man's Son, this tale depicts a team of human and animals. Unlike Storm Hosteen's beastmaster team, however, Troy's group is more accidental than intentional. But it is still a combined force against their enemies.
Highly recommended for Norton fans and for anyone else who enjoys tales of human-beast teamwork, future cultures, and high adventure.
-Arthur W. Jordin
Young Adult SF ClassicReview Date: 2002-12-04
Far, far into mankind's future, when humankind has spread out into the stars from the original planet of Terra and encountered other races...Young Troy Horan is a refugee/displaced person due to war, living the shadow life of an unwanted, non-citizen in the Dipple camp. His world and past life has gone forever and he has no future. The elite and powerbrokers of the galaxy, gathered on the pleasure planet of Korwar, prefer to ignore the unpleasant truth of the Dipple under their noses.
One day, Troy has the unbelievable luck to secure some temporary day work in a luxury pet shop. While there, he stumbles on a mystery that could cost him his life, and he goes on the run with the special sentient luxury pets he has discovered he can communicate with in the petshop.
Who can Troy trust? He and his Terran animal friends hold a dangerous secret, and various interested and powerful parties now set off in pursuit of Troy and his friends as they escape into the highly protected nature wilderness that comprises most of Korwar, and finally into the mysterious, forbidden and sealed ruins of a previous race which existed on Korwar. The ruins are officially sealed for a reason - can the escapees survive their pursuers and what lurks within?
Language and content are appropriate for children/young adults. In addition, the writing and plot is at an extremely high level, appealing to adult readers as well. Some themes are environmentalism, power, war, refugees and animal rights. One of my favourite SF books still, as an adult reader. Also one for cat lovers.
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A wonderful Arthurian-type taleReview Date: 2005-05-31
The story is told from the points of view of Teleri, a magician's girl apprentice, and Ceilyn, a knight. The plot line is a little complex, so I won't go into detail. Glastyn, the magician, has left the island where the story takes place. The knights are becoming lax and unprincipled and hardly anyone trusts magic anymore. Meanwhile, the king's sister, Diaspad, has come to visit, bringing her cruel servants with her. She is bent on taking over the kingdom by causing a rift between the king and queen.
When the story begins, Teleri accidentally finds out that Ceilyn is a shapeshifter, who changes into a wolf. He believes it is a curse, but she thinks it might be one of the ancient noble gifts. Because of his problem, Ceilyn is thrown together with the shy, timid Teleri and they eventually become friends.
During this time, Diaspad is beginning to put her plans to work. An aura of strange dark magic surrounds the castle, and strange things begin to happen. Sudden thick fogs occur and some ancient ancestoral artifacts that have been lost for centuries appear out of nowhere. Gradually Ceilyn begins to suspect Diaspad, but knows that the king will never accept this. He is completely under his sister's influence. Also, Ceilyn avoids Teleri for a while because of other influences, (read it if you want to know) but eventually they make up.
Things come to a head one night when two of Diaspad's henchmen, disguised as the queen's brothers, try to dig up the artifacts from their vault. Ceilyn is watching and tries to stop them, but is badly wounded. He barely makes it back to the castle, after Diaspad leaves, before collapsing. Luckily, it is Teleri who finds him. He is worried because Diaspad doesn't know yet who stopped her scheme, but if he doesn't recover quickly she will find out. Also, iron is poison to him, so the wound is particularly bad. However, Teleri manages to help him begin to heal and the story ends with this part. Arrgh, I hate cliffhanger endings!!!
The main things I liked about this book were the Arthurian feel, (it was just like a King Arthur story without Arthur), the made up literary bits she put at the beginning of every chapter, (it made it feel very real), and the really sweet romance between Teleri and Ceilyn. It was very well done. However, I would only recommend this book to kids over 13 (unless you are very mature) for a couple of scenes. My only other problem is the ending. It didn't tie up anything! I can't wait to read the next book now to see what happens! But, the writing is good, the setting is great and the characters are great, not to mention the fast-paced plot. Definitely a must-read!
Excellently craftedReview Date: 1999-06-04
While this could easily have turned out to be a generic sort of fantasy, Teleri's subtle development from a slight, pale shadow into a more mature person is exquisitely done. Ceilyn's depiction as a flawed man who is forced to live up to everyone's image of perfection is equally brilliant.
The heroes and villains are multi-faceted, the plot absorbing and the world-building complete and rich. What more can I say? Read Child of Saturn-- it's definitely worth the time it takes to find a copy.
Wondrous adventureReview Date: 2006-01-04
Arthurian legend, except without ArthurReview Date: 2002-09-09
On the inside: An enchanting tale that captures the spirit of Arthurian legend--but without actually being a retelling of it. Yes, parallels can be seen between some characters and events, but this is essentially an original work. The plot involves the King's spiteful sister Diaspad, who sows discord at court, and the Queen Sidonwy, who falls into disgrace as a result of Diaspad's machinations. Our hero and heroine are an idealistic knight who wants to restore the kingdom to its earlier glory and chivalry, and a shy sorcerer's apprentice who doesn't think she has any power. The plot is simple but compelling; the characters grow so real that I literally wanted to slap one of them when he broke my heart. You'll know the scene when you read it.
Two gripes
only:
(1) Court dramas, because of the sheer volume of characters, generally benefit from having a "Dramatis Personae"
in the front of the book that the reader can refer to if s/he has forgotten who so-and-so is and what his agenda is.
(2)
Series-itis! It is frustrating to get emotionally involved with a novel only to find that it doesn't really have any closure.
_Child of Saturn_ ties up some of the loose ends of the plot, but leaves enough hanging that this book can't really stand
on its own. This is especially annoying since Edgerton's books are hard to find. It looks like I'll probably have to collect
them gradually and read them out of order.
The Start of Something WondrousReview Date: 2000-03-25
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Although the book suffers from some grammatical inconsistencies and historical errors that could have benefitted from more rigorous editing, the raw experiences of Capt. Parker come through in the story telling.
If you are looking for the perspective of one man close to the action to add detail to the broader sweeps portrayed by Stephen Ambrose, Corneilius Ryan and others, then read this book. You won't be disappointed.