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Chum Water, by Hodge Wood

Click on cover image to purchase a copy

Click on cover image to purchase a copy

MWSA Review
2008 President's Award Winner

Hodge Wood’s “Sharks on Wounded Fish:  Chum Water” is an absolutely riveting read.  Although completely non-fiction, it captures and holds the readers interest as surely as if it were an engrossing novel of mystery and intrigue.

Wood grabs the reader from the very first pages with his unique voice and flair for humor, and masterfully maintains that flow throughout.  His plotting and writing skills makes reading his work a pleasure.  

I knew from reading the back cover and the introductory pages that the book was about an incredibly debilitating accident that left Hodge paralyzed, so I expected a heart-wrenching account of the fateful day that ended life as he knew it forever.  I wasn’t disappointed, but I was surprised.   The picture-painting detail and sometimes humorous way that Wood tackled a very dire and sober subject was completely unexpected, and totally appreciated.  The open and honest way that he relays the experience of his ordeal allows the reader to become a part of (and actually feel) everything that he felt and endured.  I found myself terrified during his description of the accident that broke his neck, and  completely outraged by the inept and cruel way that he was treated by some of the health care professionals that were sworn to provide quality patient care and compassion. 

Throughout his ordeal, Hodge lost everything but his faith … his faith in God and in himself.  His story is an incredible tale of strength and perseverance.  His passion for life drove him not only to push his battered body beyond its physical limits, but to thrive in his quest for a career, and a fulfilling personal life.

Wood is a master storyteller and I look very forward to reading his works to follow.  I will enthusiastically recommend “Chum Water” to my family and friends. 

MWSA Reviewer: Claudia Pemberton


Author's Synopsis

Hodge shares the extraordinary details of his four year recovery from critical injury and total paralysis in Chum Water, the first book in the Sharks on Wounded Fish series. Initially hospitalized six months with air medevac out of state, a genuine fish out-of-water still hopes to swim again. In this behind-the-scenes chronicle, a private journey from survival to success climaxes as Hodge returns to new work as a therapist assisting others with spinal cord injury. Life forever changes but dreams come true when Hodge water skis once more - with residual paralysis. Flash back to the seventies in Chum Water and be inspired when worst turns best as a street survivor becomes a career occupational therapist. Using surrealistic adventures and self-deprecating humor, Hodge provides the reader with breathtaking insights into the healthcare system - from the unique perspective of a patient and a healthcare provider.

Honor Due; By D.H. Brown

Click on cover image to purchase a copy

Click on cover image to purchase a copy

MWSA Review

Few Americans know about the American forces fighting with the Montagnards in the central highlands of Vietnam. A battlefield for some 30 years,“the ‘Yards” were one of the country’s 54 major ethnic groups. Allied with the Americans, the Montagnards were horribly persecuted by the victorious North Vietnamese after the American forces left the country in 1975, with many emigrating to the United States.

Author D.H. Brown, a Vietnam vet who fought with the Montagnards, has written a fast-paced thriller based on the CIA-Special Forces-Montagnard relationships that continued after 1975.

With the hero patterned after a special forces vet living in the Pacific Northwest rainforest, Brown’s story drags the hero, ex-Special Forces, back into the CIA- Spec Ops – Montagnard confusion of the late 1960’s – early 1970’s. His ‘yard’ friend suddenly and brutally murdered after an attempt on his own life, Brown’s hero finds himself falling in love with his friend’s daughter as they chase and are chased by a renegade CIA hit team. The action is realistic and convincing as our two defend themselves before a thrilling and surprising conclusion.

“Honor Due” is D.H. Brown’s first literary effort, and the first of a planned trilogy and is well worth reading.

MWSA Reviewer: Andrew Lubin


Author's Synopsis