A Naish Berran novel. A desperate call for help of an old friend , Henry The Bull Dozer, and his contractors, to fight and eliminate a cadre of terroristic gangs that are causing problems in his city and neighboring towns. An unexpected twist by the worlds top assassin, named Yellow Dog, who is also the leader of all the gangs, causes other twists to happen. A page turner.
When the torpedo hit and exploded, the GQ alarm went off, and Alphonso hurried to his GQ station. He had no idea that it was his GQ station that was blown apart by the torpedo. Al had to slow down because it was dark and the ship was filled with fiery smoke. He had to walk over bodies that were also blown apart laying on a bloodied deck. "I had to slow down and stop when someone grabbed me from behind," Al said. "But when I turned to see who it was, there was nobody there". Al said he thought for a second and returned to his engine room. Later Al said that if he had taken another step forward, he would have fallen into the sea. Al believed it was the hand of God that turned him around.
LUBESKI continues to thrill his readers with fresh ideas. His new book, "BACKFIRE" falls rignt in line. Private Investigator Naish Berran seeks out an old friend, Justin Case, an attorney and part-time P.I. to help him solve and bring an end to the cold-blooded killings in Carlsburg. Berran and Case form a plan of deception to "backfire" on a murderous plot, hoping it will be sucessfull. .
Author Ray Lubeski served aboard the destroyer USS Harlan R. Dickson (DD-708) from 1955 to 1958. This history entitled Linebackers of the Sea covers American destroyers that fought in WWII and their heroic crewmen, including many who died in battle. The ships covered in this book generally duplicate those included in Robert Sinclair Parkin's 1995 history entitled Blood on the Sea: American Destroyers Lost in World War II. However, Lubeski does not clarify the exact scope of his book, since some destroyers lost in WWII (e.g., Hull (DD-350), Brownson (DD-518)) do not get included, and other destroyers that fought but did not sink (e.g., Hazelwood (DD-531), Murphy (DD-603)) are included. Most of the 75 destroyers and three other ships in this book have a separate chapter that covers each ship's history. The first half of the book has ships that saw action in the Atlantic, and the last half tells stories of ships in the Pacific. The author writes that he obtained most destroyer histories from Wikipedia with supplements for some ships based on interviews of survivors or their relatives. These firsthand accounts greatly enhance the histories, but only about a third of the destroyers included in the book have personal stories, and a few of these are quite short such as the following one from a survivor of USS Pringle (DD-477), which sank after being hit by a kamikaze aircraft carrying a bomb on April 16, 1945 (p. 151). (World Wide Web)
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