The book centers around two seven-year-old boys living on an Apache reservation during the 1920s. Hank is 100% Apache all the way. Cord is an orphaned white boy whose parents were killed in an automobile accident on a reservation road. He was adopted by chief Jack Silver Eyes, Hank’s father. The boys become blood brothers. Cord wants to learn his genealogy. He learns of many exacting people in his blood line. The Second World War interrupts their schooling, so they join the Marine Corps as second lieutenants on the bloody frontlines of the Pacific Islands, Iwo Jima, Guadalcanal, etc. They both get wounded on Guadalcanal, transferred to the Mercy ship, docked at Quamaya Island. They cause quite a stir there, improving many miserable lives. The war ends. They split from Quamaya, returning home, they become very successful businessmen, bringing their tribes into the 20th century. Hank gets married. The next fifty chapters are more exciting as Hank and Cord establish a Club for extremely rich millionaires looking for a way to help the impoverished peoples of the world. These two men solve the problem for these philanthropists who want to share their fortunes. It is an exciting adventure ending in Cord's marriage. It is full of love, sex, on the land, sea, and air. Everything the reader will enjoy for the right price.
The book centers around two seven-year-old boys living on an Apache reservation during the 1920s. Hank is 100% Apache all the way. Cord is an orphaned white boy whose parents were killed in an automobile accident on a reservation road. He was adopted by chief Jack Silver Eyes, Hank’s father. The boys become blood brothers. Cord wants to learn his genealogy. He learns of many exacting people in his blood line. The Second World War interrupts their schooling, so they join the Marine Corps as second lieutenants on the bloody frontlines of the Pacific Islands, Iwo Jima, Guadalcanal, etc. They both get wounded on Guadalcanal, transferred to the Mercy ship, docked at Quamaya Island. They cause quite a stir there, improving many miserable lives. The war ends. They split from Quamaya, returning home, they become very successful businessmen, bringing their tribes into the 20th century. Hank gets married. The next fifty chapters are more exciting as Hank and Cord establish a Club for extremely rich millionaires looking for a way to help the impoverished peoples of the world. These two men solve the problem for these philanthropists who want to share their fortunes. It is an exciting adventure ending in Cord's marriage. It is full of love, sex, on the land, sea, and air. Everything the reader will enjoy for the right price.
This classic political memoir offers an insider’s view of Washington in the ‘50s and ‘60s—with a preface by the author reflecting on the Clinton era. A Texas native, Harry McPherson went to Washington in 1956 as an assistant to Senate Majority Leader Lyndon Johnson. He served in key posts under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, including as Johnson’s special counsel and speechwriter. In Political Education, McPherson offers a vividly evocative portrait of Johnson’s tumultuous presidency and of the conflicts and factions of the president's staff. Long regarded as a political classic, it is essential reading for anyone seeking to understand national politics of the period. In 1995, McPherson added a preface discussing how Washington had changed since the Johnson era. In it he suggests what lessons Bill Clinton could have learn from Johnson’s time in the Oval Office.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.