2021

On 21st Century Nuclear Deterrence by Joe Buff

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Click on cover image to purchase a copy

MWSA Review
A thoroughly dog-eared copy of Joe Buff’s On 21st Century Nuclear Deterrence deserves a spot on the bookshelves of policy advisors and strategic thinkers. Buff tackles and confronts the complex and highly-nuanced planning that goes into maintaining an effective nuclear deterrence strategy using the sea-air-land triad. Buff writes with a balanced approach that will be appreciated by readers of varying interest and experience in the subject, offering useful anecdotes, historical insights, and subtle wit throughout his book. He faces a touchy subject that many are unwilling or reluctant to address: that among the myriad issues facing the world in the first quarter of the 21st century, there are still a tremendous number of nuclear weapons out there, and while rational powers can surely agree that their use would have catastrophic consequences, we must indeed contend with the fact that they exist…and might end up in the wrong hands.

Buff writes with enthusiasm and earnestness, and his professional role as an actuarial comes out frequently in the mathematical calculations he provides to support his views. He also has a frank and honest approach to writing about a subject that gets too little attention in superpower struggles today in jargon-free prose. I was particularly drawn to the subject of nuclear weapons getting into the hands of terrorists and rogue powers which may not have a rational, game-theory approach to their decision making. It’s a chilling scenario to ponder, and Buff’s book should be a key reference for both US and global policy makers on this important topic.

Review by Frank Biggio (June 2021)
 

Author's Synopsis
A readable, engaging (and reassuring) look at how Americans, and all of Humanity, will benefit tremendously if we do sustain and modernize US Strategic Command's rightsized nuclear deterrence Triad: We'll continue to prevent nuclear war, big conventional war between superpowers, nuclear blackmail by rogue states, and achieve our global counter-proliferation and nuclear counter-terrorism goals, while also deterring strategic attacks by biological or chemical weapons or other weapons of mass destruction. This series offers a logically rigorous framework, crisply and clearly explained, for successful U.S. national defense and global peacekeeping during the current era of rising Great Power Competition. Volume 1 vividly debunks many common myths about America's nukes -- some of them spread by Hollywood storytellers and some by foreign adversary disinformation trolls.

ISBN/ASIN: 978-1736391006 B08XKDJHPX

Book Format(s): Soft cover, Epub/Kindle

Review Genre: Nonfiction—Reference

Number of Pages: 416


Heaven by Frank Taylor

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Click on cover image to purchase a copy via email

MWSA Review
FE Taylor’s book titled Heaven: The Other Side is a picture book for adults on the topic of death, dying, heaven, and the afterlife. The book is a compilation of sayings and expressions of sympathy offered at viewings, memorials, and in obituary columns. The black and white illustrations are clear and well-done. Perhaps those reading this book could find comfort in coloring these pictures.

Heaven is meant to be comforting assurance for the reader as to what lies ahead. I understand Mr. Taylor's thoughtful premise but feel that occasional use of scripture substantiation would have given more weight to his words.

Congratulations to FE Taylor for undertaking the production of Heaven despite having dyslexia.

Review by Nancy Panko (May 2021)
 

Author's Synopsis
This book illustrates a view of life after death through the eyes of a dyslexic. Among the many symptoms of dyslexia reading comprehension becomes difficult when the meaning of words are visualized before they are placed in context. Visualizing the literal meaning of words makes metaphorical understanding challenging. Experiencing several dyslexic symptoms the author illustrates how he views Heaven from the sentiments of loved ones left behind.

ISBN/ASIN: 978 1 7326539 9 3

Book Format(s): Soft cover

Review Genre: Collections—Religious/Spiritual

Number of Pages: 48


Welcome Back to Abuja Once Again by Carol Yee

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MWSA Review
Carol Yee’s Welcome Back to Abuja Once Again is a warmly written, informative memoir about how travel made her a citizen of the world. It also has many tips for those who may want to travel internationally, but are a bit timid and don’t really know how to go about it.

In her book, she discusses cultural differences in food, appearance, and customs that show her deep understanding of various parts of the world, while at the same time providing important information to her readers who might be considering travel. She covers practical issues such as “How do I know if the water is safe?” and “What is the attitude toward women and their dress?” in various countries. She also gives good advice on adjusting one’s own behavior to gain better understanding of the local peoples and maximize the travel experience. This is all done in informative and sometimes humorous ways, citing her extensive travel around the world.

I particularly like her humble, humorous style which conveys some fairly serious lessons without ever making herself out to be an expert or talking down to the audience. The book is well-written, has numerous important travel resources, and is easy to understand.

Readers who enjoy travel, who must travel internationally for work, or who think they might wish to travel internationally in their later years will most certainly enjoy this book.

Review by Rob Ballister (June 2021)
 

Author's Synopsis
Through people-to-people encounters, we expand our sense of mutual understanding and respect.

Welcome Back to Abuja Once Again: How I Became a Citizen of the World highlights how rewarding it is to engage people from around the world. Learning from others who are different from us reveals our common humanity and enhances our ability to solve problems and deal with global crises.

You will be entertained by different travel adventures from around the world and be exposed to interesting cross cultural insights, both cautionary but also delightful.  

World travelers will enjoy “traveling” through Welcome Back to Abuja Once Again, recalling their own experiences, while novice travelers will feel the spark to get out and explore the world.

ISBN/ASIN: 978-1636765921, 978-1636761077, 978-1636761084

Book Format(s): Soft cover, Kindle, ePub/iBook

Review Genre: Nonfiction—Memoir/Biography

Number of Pages: 256


B.R.A.N.D. Before your Resumé by Graciela Tiscareño-Sato

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MWSA Review
B.R.A.N.D. Before Your Resume by Graciela Tiscareno-Sato is a 171-page self-help book aimed at a specific audience: Your Marketing Guide for Veterans and Military Service Members Entering Civilian Life. However, the processes described are beneficial to anyone seeking a job or career change. The book relies heavily on the workshops that the author has offered over a decade or more and contains useful exercises.

Review by Nancy Kauffman (June 2021)

 

Author's Synopsis
B.R.A.N.D. Before Your Resumé is the first book written by a military veteran (turned marketing professional and entrepreneur) for service members and military veterans to craft their forward-looking,  AUTHENTIC personal branding.

Student veterans, military spouses, veterans in their first, second, or third career transitions will all learn valuable self-marketing skills, guided by a veteran who knows the transition chaos (and success!) firsthand. 

This book is essential if you’re joining the ranks of veterans choosing the entrepreneurship track, if seeking your first career after leaving the active-duty force, or if pursuing your first internship or full-time job after completing your degree as a student veteran.

Readers will complete the “extracting product attributes” exercise, see 25+ examples of great branding created BY veterans Graciela has personally coached, and be able to write their own authentic personal branding to influence their intended target audience. 

Graciela teaches the reader a repeatable marketing messaging process that will be useful for years to come.

Those who wish to collaborate live with Graciela, who will coach them to perfecting their branding and/or discussing their business startup idea, will be offered the option to do so.

In this marketing guidebook, Graciela guides you in becoming an epic storyteller of your unique value, long before you write your resumé which she reminds us all is a marketing deliverable. Taking this approach as she did during her career transitions means that your audience for your new forward-looking branding will be so intrigued by your value that they’ll ASK for your resumé!

You’ll be empowered to confidently communicate your value to make things happen, as Graciela did during her transformation from military aviator to technology marketing manager. Graciela freely shares the communication process she followed during her highly successful military-to-civilian transition, in which she was mentored by women veterans every step of the way.

Stop going at it alone.

And most importantly, stop listening to those pushing you into writing your resumé (or worse yet your LinkedIn profile) before you’ve done the essential work to understand your personal values and interests, your value to civilian organizations and the target audience you need to attract.

Learn to "B.R.A.N.D. Before Your Resumé" with a marketing-savvy fellow veteran at your side.

ISBN/ASIN: 978-0997309065,

Book Format(s): Hard cover, Kindle, ePub/iBook

Review Genre: Nonfiction—How to/Business

Number of Pages: 185


The First Recruit by Alton Ioerger

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MWSA Review
James Witt is a skilled sniper recruited by the CIA for a new program that takes him out of the army and into classified jobs in Vietnam and Europe during the Cold War. Witt's story unfolds through his training, deployments, and multiple assassinations around the globe. The narrative is held together by Witt's bonds with two fellow snipers and his government handler. But while the scenery and setting change from one killing to the next, there is an overall sameness to his experiences by the time the story ends.

The creative look at the CIA sniper program keeps readers attention as the plot takes many twists and turns. While the story feels real, the author states that “Similarities to real people, places, or events are entirely coincidental.”

The author created a compelling story by paralleling CIA special operations and the human toll of loneliness for an insider look at special ops from years ago. More rigorous editing would have improved readability.

Review by Betsy Beard (May 2021)
 

Author's Synopsis
The First Recruit is an emotionally charged Cold War thriller where danger lurks around every corner and assassinations are effected with compelling intensity and swiftness.  Sergeant James Witt, whose skill as a sniper makes him the first recruit in the CIAs newest covert program, slips unseen behind the Iron Curtain dozens of times into an opaque world of brutal conflicts and espionage.  This is an unforgettable journey of faithfulness, courage, and aching loss amidst hope, resilience, and a reaffirmation of the human spirit.

This brilliantly written fictional narrative is a sobering reveal of how a top-secret CIA project careened out of control into a catastrophe that remains classified even today.

ISBN/ASIN: 9781393218777, 9781393817604

Book Format(s): Soft cover, Kindle, ePub/iBook

Review Genre: Fiction—Historical Fiction

Number of Pages: 258


Fragments: The Long Coming Home from Vietnam by Bruce Berger

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MWSA Review
This is an incredible read.

Though short in page/word count, Bruce Berger’s Fragments reads like an opus of the Vietnam War, outlining what he refers to in the audio version as “the long afterness” of the war. It has the emotional impact of Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried or Karl Marlantes’s Matterhorn, and we’re fortunate to have Fragments join the canon of literature that emerged from the veterans of that long war.
This is not a typical “Roses are red, violets are blue…” book of poetry. Berger’s writing style is soulful and improvisational, which lends a sense of honesty and earnestness to his characters and scenes. The result is 34 individual stories/poems that will pull at a reader’s psyche and leave a lasting vision of what it was like to serve and survive in Vietnam.

Berger proves to be a patriot, poet, and philosopher. There isn’t much chest-thumping bravado in his poems. Instead, he delves into the fear, hope, confusion, desperation, and loneliness of this war. Berger also pays homage to the people of Vietnam, with several stories driving home the perspective of the Vietnamese people who were fighting and living through the war as well, whether it is the double-entendre story of “Girl Selling Her Fruit” or the soul crushing “Widows’ Village.” In this regard, Berger humanizes the Vietnamese people, similar to how Ken Burns did in his documentary The Vietnam War.

There are too many brilliant passages to describe, but here are a few that had a powerful, stinging impact for me:
“…the bloody mathematics of such action…”
“Why the hell were we where the hell we were?”
“…ceremonial ribbons, silver affirmations and golden glorifications…”
“…the detritus of my delirium…”
“His heart leaks into the grave”

Fragments is about Berger’s time in Vietnam, and this book will take readers “there”—both to the literal jungles and the psychological jungles in the depths of the minds of those who walked the ground in country. And even though this is a book about the Vietnam experience, Berger’s words will resonate with anybody who has served—whenever and wherever—particularly in Afghanistan, that has so many parallels to Vietnam.

An added bonus to this fantastic book are the works of art provided by the Providence Art Club in Rhode Island. The art complements many of the stories and makes this a wonderful work of history, poetry, philosophy, and art. I originally had this on a Kindle but ordered a print version and am grateful to have it in my library.

Review by Frank Biggio (May 2021)
 

Author's Synopsis
Bruce Berger, the author, finally came home 50 years after the Vietnam war when his memories crystallized into the 34 poems in this chapbook. He served in Vietnam in 1970 with the Casualty Branch of the 101st Airborne Division. As “next-of-kin” editor, he wrote hundreds of sympathy letters to grieving families back home, and sometimes helped gather fallen brothers on battle grounds to begin their long journeys home. He was immersed in the words, images, weight, and limitless reach of death. 

Through this lens, his poems evoke an overwhelming sense of loss on many fronts: the brave soldiers who gave their lives; a village of South Vietnamese widows; the thousands of bui doi, innocent but reviled half-breed (Amerasian) children; the empty afterness of battle grounds and burials; the long, deadly reach of Agent Orange and PTSD into veterans’ lives still today; and the thunderous silence of missing parades back home. Writing these poems brought him home. 

The book is divided into six sections: Taps, Dreaming of Home, Life on the Perimeter, Pictures and Prayers, PTSD, and Seasons. The 34 moving poems are enriched by 25 powerful illustrations created by 13 members of the Providence Art Club of Rhode Island.

ISBN/ASIN: 978-0-9855048-1-6,978-0-9855048-2-3,978-0-9855048-3-0

Book Format(s): Soft cover, Kindle, Audiobook

Review Genre: Poetry—Poetry Book

Number of Pages: 92


A Sailor’s Journey by Raymond Perrotti

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Click on cover image to purchase a copy

MWSA Review
Author Ray Perrotti has provided us with a fun, easy read in his memoir A Sailor's Journey. In the spring of 1966, Ray is about to graduate from high school and doesn't consider himself college material. With the Vietnam conflict getting bigger and bigger, and the military draft looming over him, Ray decides to get ahead of the inevitable and enlists in the U.S. Navy. A Sailor's Journey takes us from his first day at Boot Camp through his two-year stint in the navy. Serving on a couple of destroyers in a multitude of jobs, the author's enlistment includes two separate tours of duty off the coast of Vietnam where his destroyer runs the gun line, firing at enemy positions on shore. Unfortunately, the North Vietnamese guns fire back, and on one occasion, a round hits his ship, killing and wounding his shipmates. More than just the experience in combat, this book gives us a good look at the life of a sailor at sea.

Review by Bob Doerr (May 2021)

 

Author's Synopsis
In 1966, most young men graduating high school in America only saw three options: go to college, wait to be drafted, or enlist. Ray chose enlistment, and for the next three years, embarked on the adventure of a lifetime around the world on a Navy Destroyer. 

Read firsthand accounts of working with NASA on Apollo capsule retrieval and participating in Naval rituals like crossing the Equator. Lose yourself in memories that have delighted friends and family for decades, now collected in this personal and honest look backward. 

In A Sailor’s Journey, Ray Perrotti shares genuine, personal stories about Navy life during Vietnam. This memoir captures the good, the bad, and the hustle of a not-so-typical enlisted man, just trying to get through his commitment to serve.

ISBN/ASIN: 9798580693729

Book Format(s): Soft cover, Kindle

Review Genre: Nonfiction—Memoir/Biography

Number of Pages: 134

They Were Soldiers by Marvin Wolf

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Click on cover image to purchase a copy

MWSA Review
Marvin Wolf and Joseph Galloway have provided poignant, stirring accounts of the lives of nearly fifty Vietnam veterans in They Were Soldiers. Going beyond a simple retelling of their Vietnam experiences, Wolf and Galloway depict how these events shaped the lives of these people once they made it back home. Whether in Vietnam or back in the United States, these persons have made a broad impact on their families, friends, states, and nation, and their contributions are shared publicly in this book.

Wide-ranging is an accurate description of these narratives. Well-known names such as Chuck Hagel and Oliver Stone can be found alongside unfamiliar names such as Ted Gostas and Hal Kushner. The authors’ goal is to present a cross-section of individuals that accurately represent those that served in Vietnam. Men and women of each race and ethnicity, including Vietnamese refugees, are included in this broad category.
They all share one characteristic: they came back from the war changed by their experiences. Their stories are told in simple, plain terms, often incorporating their own words. The danger, sorrow, and despair of the war hang heavily in the book’s pages but clash deeply with the hope and resilience expressed by these individuals since the end of the war. The result is definitively inspiring.

This book should be considered a must-read by anyone interested in personal accounts from the Vietnam War. In addition, the uplifting, honest stories will more than likely make a positive impact for veterans in their post-war lives.

Review by Braden Hall (May 2021)

 

Author's Synopsis
They Were Soldiers showcases the inspiring true stories of 47 Vietnam veterans who returned home from the "lost war" to enrich America's present and future.

In this groundbreaking new book, the authors reveal the private lives of those who returned from Vietnam to make astonishing contributions in science, medicine, business, and other arenas, and change America for the better.

For decades, the soldiers who served in Vietnam were shunned by the American public and ignored by their government. Many were vilified or had their struggles to reintegrate into society magnified by distorted depictions of veterans as dangerous or demented. Even today, Vietnam veterans have not received their due. Until now. These profiles are touching and courageous, and often startling.

ISBN/ASIN: 978-1400208807

Book Format(s): Hard cover, Kindle, Audiobook

Review Genre: Nonfiction—History

Number of Pages: 416

M-9 by Marvin Wolf

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MWSA Review
When you step into the origin story of Marvin J. Wolf's Chelmin and Spaulding CID mystery, M-9, it's much like being in the front seat of the world's wildest roller coaster. You have a nice overview from the original climb, and then drop right into more action than you are ready for, with boomerang turns that double back, corkscrew twists to disorient you, the odd "what the hell was that" moment that leaves your heart in your throat, and when you hit that last page, the feeling of, "Ah man, this can’t be the end already."

It begins with a woman's body in a boxcar full of military clothing. In the next 100 pages you have a sniper attack, one RPG assault that ends with a shootout at a bank robbery, a second RPG attack on a courthouse that ends with two “near miraculous” head shots at 198 yards, a multi-jurisdictional testosterone dispute that confuses every aspect of the case, drug smuggling, money laundering, some cartel red herrings, and a few other bodies along the way. By the time you get to the obligatory but not formulaic partner rescue, the clues are all there, but the junior partner is a touch inexperienced to connect the dots as quickly as one would like.

The partners are well balanced between youthful enthusiasm and cynical experience, both with interesting back stories. Chelmin, the senior partner is a wounded vet with nearly 30 years in CID, a widower whose wife's death is questionable and unresolved. His foray into a relationship with his former sister-in-law is cautious, almost reticent but touching. Spaulding is the young, noble, honest cop who ruined his career by arresting the wrong rich entitled local and has joined the army because he has no other law enforcement options, and he has three generations of Army Airman family he is measuring himself against. It drives him to a level of character that is almost too good. People like that exist, but they are rare. To be honest, Spaulding is the kind of young, handsome, honest, heroic hot chopper pilot that women would stalk in cooperative pairs if not in coordinated packs. A knight errant would make him less Galahad, perhaps to detriment. This is obvious when in the foreshadowing of the Black Hat reveal, he gets played in a way that is clear he is being played but not exactly why—by whom is what adds to the tension.

After a story that leads to Costa Rica and Belize, the ending has lead villains that you never see coming, a couple of support villains that make perfect sense in hindsight, and a few minor characters that get what they deserve in a moment of warm and comforting schadenfreude that will elicit hearty laughter. Enjoy it. I did.

And, then, you turn that last page, and raise your eyes from the page with a wistful, "Please sir, may I have some more?" Luckily, there is more, The Zombie Deception. M-9 is the first of what I hope will be a long literary series and, with the right casting and a director who would deviate not one single iota from the source material, a major movie franchise. These two guys are just that good.

The formatting of the pages will be a bit odd for some readers, as paragraphs are short and widely spaced. And the chapter breaks can feel like a scene cut, more of a movie script than a story. Some will find this easier to read than a more conventional format. It makes for an easily read, fast-paced story where you almost cannot turn pages fast enough.

Review by John Russell (April 2021)
 

Author's Synopsis
Two unlikely partners find themselves in the crosshairs of a ruthless international gang in this thriller. Wily detective Rudy Chelmin joined the Army Criminal Investigation Division after losing his leg in action in 1991. Rudy discovers a new partner in recruit Will Spaulding, who finds a woman’s naked body in a boxcar full of Army boots. Will enlisted in the Army after getting run out of Barstow, California, after daring to arrest a guilty but privileged scion. The two pair up to solve the murder of Kendra Farrell, the naked woman who died from hypothermia. But their efforts attract the attention of M-9, a dangerous Salvadoran gang, which blows up Will’s Camaro with an RPG. Kendra worked at a base that was the Marine equivalent of Amazon.com, handling orders for all sorts of items. So first the investigators have to determine whether Kendra was involved in or stumbled onto something shady. Next, they have to figure out which of the police with whom they have been working may be in league with M-9, striving to block their investigation. Finally, Rudy disappears and Will has to locate him before he ends up exactly like Kendra.

ISBN/ASIN: ASIN : B07WW2922H

Book Format(s): Soft cover, Kindle, Audiobook

Review Genre: Fiction—Mystery/Thriller

Number of Pages: 435

Up Here...A 10th Mountain Soldier's Letters Home 1943-1945 by David T. Hoople

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Click on cover image to purchase a copy

MWSA Review
In Up Here... A 10th Mountain Soldier's Letters Home 1943-1945, author David Hoople has put together a fitting tribute to his father, Theodore "Ted" Hoople (1924-1976). After a short introduction, which provides useful scene-setting information, the book includes a series of personal letters describing Ted Hoople's military service during World War II. Most of the letters were written by the author's father, but the book also includes correspondence by other family members reacting to Ted's stint in the Army's 10th Mountain Division. 

The letters begin in March of 1943, as Ted goes through rigorous military training in various stateside locations. The family correspondence continues as Ted deploys to the European theater in January of 1945. Ted sees action in the Apennine mountains of Italy, where he is wounded in April of that year. Ted's letters continue during his service in northern Italy, Yugoslavia, and Austria after the Germans surrendered in May of 1945. 

Up Here is a fine compilation of letters depicting the service of a member of America's "greatest generation," and serves as a wonderful addition to the Hoople family's history.

Review by John Cathcart (April 2021)

 

Author's Synopsis
These letters and the documented events that surround them, serve as an integral part of the history of the 10th Mountain Division during World War II, as seen through the eyes of patriotic nineteen year old volunteer. They describe the daily life from the grueling training in the mountains of Colorado, through the intense combat in Italy. The story emerges as a coming of age chronicle and celebrates the courage and patriotism that was the common fiber of "The Greatest Generation".

ISBN/ASIN: 9 780578 798639

Book Format(s): Soft cover, Kindle

Review Genre: Nonfiction—Memoir/Biography

Number of Pages: 242


Impaired by Michael Lepore

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MWSA Review
Impaired: The Continuing Crisis for Vietnam Veterans by Michael Lepore is a heartfelt and moving tribute to those who served during that war. Lepore’s latest installment of poetry books focusing on Vietnam includes an additional theme: the recognition of mortality that comes with old age.

Most combat veterans are forced to come to grips with their mortality as young men and women. After coming face to face with death repeatedly during that war, Vietnam veterans are now dealing with another, even more intractable foe: the Old Man’s Grim Reaper. As Lepore deftly points out in several of his poems, these vets are getting old and facing the end of their lives—often without much support, and frequently while also fighting the ghosts of that now long-past, and still unpopular conflict.

Review by John Cathcart (May 2021)
 

Author's Synopsis
Poems in this collection provide glimpses into the hearts and minds of Vietnam War combat veterans, men who were once vital and strong facing the reality of age and approaching death. Some of the veterans in these poems are at war with themselves, some return to the country where their youth was lost and some fear for the future. As in real life, there are seldom happy endings to these stories. They are not anti-war poems or pro-war poems; they just tell it the way it was and the way it is.

ISBN/ASIN: 978-1-943826-77-3

Book Format(s): Soft cover

Review Genre: Poetry—Poetry Book

Number of Pages: 50


20 Year Letter: An Afghanistan Chronicle by Benjamin Warner

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MWSA Review
In his memoir, 20-Year Letter, Ben Warner bares his soul as a young, patriotic reserve officer eager to serve his country.  He jumps at the chance for an assignment at Fort Lewis hoping to be deployed to fight in the War on Terror. Slapped in the face with government bureaucracy, Ben’s exuberant spirit is almost entirely crushed by superiors and peers treating Ben and his reservists as if they were second class soldiers with no strategic skills. When a year later, they have the opportunity to deploy to Afghanistan, they beg for the chance to get out of a bad state-side station and finally prove they’re worth every bit as much as regular army soldiers.

Mr. Warner delivers a compelling memoir of his no-nonsense, 2002 Army deployment in 20-Year Letter: An Afghanistan Chronicle. Beginning with peering out of the rear cargo door of the plane into the pitch-black night, young Ben realizes his first challenge in Afghanistan is to lead his team off the airplane across an airfield riddled with land mines.

Warner’s description of people and events, feelings and consequences endured while in Afghanistan illustrate how a soldier matures over a deployment with each terrifying, stressful event. Relationships are forged during military service on a different plane than in civilian life that can only be explained by what happens in a war zone and on a battlefield.

Despite grammatical and punctuation errors, this story is told in a conversational manner that makes you feel as if the author is telling his story directly to you. He gives us all a glimpse into America’s longest war, the absurdity of governmental red-tape, and the life of a citizen soldier.

Review by Nancy Panko (May 2021)

 

Author's Synopsis
A few short months removed from the events of 9/11, LT Warner is a young reserve officer with a burning desire to serve. Presented with the opportunity to do so in the new Global War on Terror, he jumps into his new assignment full blast, oozing with patriotism, a lot of cockiness, and not much of a plan. But soon enough he finds that his new normal will be clouded with uncertainty. New soldiers, new leadership, and a new geographic location are just the tip of the iceberg.

As the rear cargo door of the plane lowers to reveal a pitch-black Afghanistan night, the young leader encounters his first real challenge: simply leading the team off the airplane—over an airfield riddled with landmines. From there, 20-Year Letter follows LT Warner throughout the entire undertaking, chronicling the bad, the terrifying, the stressful, and even a little bit of the good. His tale is a comprehensive perspective of everything that isn’t glamorous about war.

ISBN/ASIN: 978-1646633180, 978-1646633203

Book Format(s): Hard cover, Soft cover, Kindle, ePub/iBook

Review Genre: Nonfiction—Memoir/Biography

Number of Pages: 186

Devil's Den by David Brown

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MWSA Review
Devil’s Den: Marines War in Lebanon 1983 tells the story of the 1st Battalion, 8th Marines (1/8) sent on a peacekeeping mission in Beirut that turned into a war zone during their deployment. Author Lt. Col. David Brown, USMC (Ret.) does an excellent job setting the scene for readers and relaying the story through the lens of three enlisted Marines, a Navy corpsman, and other key figures who were part of the 1/8. Brown portrays the extraordinary courage of those on the ground in the middle of a confusing, difficult, dangerous, and deadly time.

The author excelled at character development, and particularly for his portrayal of Danny Joy. Readers will turn pages wondering what this young hero will do next and when he will ever stop proving he is an extraordinary human being. Many of the images provided by the men who were there, including Joy, provide an accurate glimpse into how the men lived in Beirut. The maps, historical photos, and graphics showed an intense level of research which the reader learns from placing the story in greater context.

Devil’s Den is an important work of literature capturing a period of time which some Americans may not know about or may have forgotten. This is a story that needed to be told, and the author did that well. This book is highly recommended for those who appreciate military history and the stories of the humans who bravely sacrificed for their country under unusual circumstances.

MWSA Review by Valerie Ormond (May 2021)
 

Author's Synopsis
Devil’s Den is a gripping story about a group of young, high-spirited, cocky, and sometimes rebellious US Marines and sailors sent by a reluctant commander in chief to the Middle East to assume a mission they hadn’t prepared for and didn’t understand.

Lebanon’s civil war was in its eighth year in May 1983 when they landed in Beirut as peacekeepers to join a multinational force. There, they faced brazened Muslim leaders, militia, soldiers, and terrorists who took full advantage of these combatants constrained by overly restrictive rules of engagement. Who were these men? Where did they come from? Why should they be concerned about their adventure to Beirut? Devil’s Den will take you to the gates of Hell with its explosive inferno. Neither the men who survived nor the reader will ever be the same.

ISBN/ASIN: 978-1-9845-8861-6, 978-1-9845-8860-9, 978-1-9845-8859-3

Book Format(s): Soft cover

Review Genre: Fiction—Historical Fiction

Number of Pages: 332

The Midshipmen's Story by Thomas F. McCaffery

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MWSA Review
Thomas F. McCaffery, a career merchant mariner, weaves a tale of unlikely survival, individual courage, bureaucratic concerns, and inspired leadership of the crew of the USS Lakatoi off the coast of New Caledonia in 1942. The Midshipmen's Tale is a quick read, owing to the strength of the main character, LCDR James I. MacPherson, and the nuance with which McCaffery writes about command at sea. The largely unheralded role the merchant marine played in Allied victory is brought to life in McCaffery's first fictional work. Like his previous non-fiction book, Braving the Wartime Seas, the detailed research and historical accuracy present in The Midshipmen's Tale are a tribute to McCaffery's skill as a researcher and ability to find overlooked stories, making them accessible for a wider audience.

Review by Timothy Heck (April 2021)

 

Author's Synopsis
In 1842 Midshipman Phillip Spencer, USN, son of the Secretary of War, was hung for inciting the crew of USS Somers to mutiny. Since then U.S. Navy midshipmen have not been crew members of any commissioned U.S. Navy ship at any time, but especially in combat. That is, until 1941, when the needs of the oncoming war required a small change in the U.S. Navy's century-old policy. That summer, fifty students at what would become the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, known as Cadet/Midshipmen, were assigned as midshipmen to U.S. Navy amphibious transports. The assignment, as with all midshipmen in history, was originally for training. However, the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor changed everything. On August 7, 1942 six of these midshipmen were on duty at Guadalcanal for America’s first amphibious offensive against the Japanese. Two of them, Edward S. Davis and Robert H. Dudley, were ordered to abandon their ship, USS George F. Elliott, after a Japanese bomber crashed into it, starting an uncontrollable fire. In the aftermath of the Navy’s defeat at Savo Island that night, the transports, and their midshipmen, were forced to retreat to safer waters, leaving the Marines with just half of their supplies and equipment to carry on the fight. But, the Marines couldn’t just be abandoned to their fate. Unable to return to Guadalcanal in force, covert plans were hurriedly improvised by the Navy to resupply them. One of these plans was to slip a former inter-island freighter, M/V Lakatoi, past the watchful Japanese into Guadalcanal. Commissioned USS Lakatoi, the ship and its volunteer Navy crew, including Midshipmen Edward Davis and Robert Dudley, set sail on a desperate, impossible mission from which none of its crew believed they would return. In summing up their remarkable story, Vice Admiral William F. Halsey wrote, “The Commanding Officer and members of the crew of the U. S. S. LAKATOI displayed fortitude and heroism in keeping with the best traditions of the service.”

ISBN/ASIN: 978-1-7363326-2-7,978-1-7363326-0-3,978-1-7363326-1-0

Book Format(s): Soft cover, Kindle

Review Genre: Fiction—Historical Fiction

Number of Pages: 254


My Pilot: A Story of War, Love and ALS by Sarajane Giere

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Click on cover image to purchase a copy

MWSA Review
Can you imagine you are due to have your first baby the week your husband leaves to fly F4 Phantom jets in Vietnam and your mother suddenly passes away? That is a smidgeon of the challenges faced by the Giere's fifty-three year life journey together. Author Sarajane Giere provides a marvelous chronological reflection of life with her pilot-husband. From the beautiful get-go to the unfortunate end, caused by a fatal degenerative neurological disease, these two people show how to hold on tightly together and never let go.

This couple falls in love early and stays there. Young Bernie Giere graduates ROTC and gets the lucky draw to become an Air Force pilot. In short order, he is assigned to fly the brand new F4 Phantom jets out of the factory. Deployment soon follows to fight in these incredible jets in Vietnam. He bails out twice and completes 214 missions. Later Bernie pilots for commercial carriers Pan Am and Delta and is directly involved with the Air National Guard. There is so much more told as Bernie completes life with his wife and two children while flying eleven airplanes in forty-six years. Author Sarajane captures how they did it right, despite seemingly insurmountable challenges. They shared a deep love that I found admirable.

The Gieres faced amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a rare disease, in heroic fashion. Readers will appreciate their insightful battle and learn practical strategies to cope with and manage this terminal condition. As a career therapist, I have followed patients with ALS. Without a doubt, the progressive muscular paralysis faced is catastrophic. It creeps away with neuromuscular functions, including swallowing and breathing. I tip my hat to Bernie and Sarajane with the way they kept love alive, despite this tragic disease.

This book is recommended for anyone who appreciates leaders in life through service to country and beyond. You will find that love abounds and that is most inspiring.

Review by Hodge Wood (April 2021)

Author's Synopsis
My Pilot offers a uniquely intimate glimpse into the life of a military wife as she tells the story of her fighter pilot husband, Bernie, a Vietnam veteran who flew 214 combat missions in the Vietnam War and served twenty-five years in the Air National Guard's world-class 106th Rescue Wing. With searing and explicit honesty she recalls the terror of the Vietnam years and the lifetime sacrifices that affected her pilot's life and death. In the telling, she honors her husband, their family, and their extended military family, the community she holds dear.

ISBN/ASIN: 978-1-944635-20-0, 978-1-944635-21-7, B08LMG92DS

Book Format(s): Soft cover, Kindle

Review Genre: Nonfiction—Memoir/Biography

Number of Pages: 226


Young Hickory by Steven Underwood

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Click on cover image to purchase a copy

MWSA Review
Young Hickory: A WWII Novel by Steven F. Underwood follows the deployment of James Farrell from 1944 to 1945 through attachments to different platoons in the 120th Regiment of the 30th Division in Europe. The book is populated by many and varied characters, some of them fictional and some of them based in reality. The author has undertaken an enormous amount of research to frame a fictitious individual’s experience of World War II from the D-Day Normandy invasion through the Battle of the Bulge and beyond. Many footnotes are included in this work of fiction to differentiate which characters are real people.

Tall and lanky, Jim is tapped to become a runner, miraculously finding his way through enemy lines to deliver information from the front lines—where his company is surrounded on Mortain’s Hill 314—to headquarters and back again. From there we follow him through France, Belgium, and Germany to Magdeburg, short of Berlin. He is wounded several times and finds love in Liege, Belgium, before meeting —while recuperating from significant wounds in a hospital in Cologne—the woman he will eventually marry.

Readers will want to print out the list of characters in the beginning of the book, so as to keep them all straight. A map is also a helpful aid in understanding what was happening and where it was happening.

Review by Betsy Beard (May 2021)

 

Author's Synopsis
The 75th anniversary of the ending of World War II inspired me to write a novel centered on the exploits of a remarkable National Guard division, the 30th, nicknamed ‘Old Hickory.’

Jim Farrell joins the 30th Infantry Division in July, 1944. Injured in a D-Day practice exercise with the 29th Division, he is a replacement in the Old Hickory Division after an accidental bombing attack severely damages the 120th Regiment. It takes time for Jim to assimilate into his new unit, but his observational and tracking skills soon earn him praise. His efforts help Easy Company, 2nd Battalion, 120th survive the battle of Mortain.

Wounded in action, Jim goes to Liege for medical attention. There, he meets a young Belgian woman named Lille. He falls madly in love with her. She returns his affection. The tall, handsome Virginian reminds her of Gary Cooper.

He rejoins the 120th where his abilities lead to his addition to the Intelligence and Reconnaissance Platoon of the regiment. He becomes friends with Dave Harris, a native of Greensboro who has visited Jim’s hometown of Alta Vista.

Jim, Dave, and his entire squad distinguish themselves at the battle of Aachen and Jim gains a promotion. He is given a pass to Paris, but he goes to Liege instead. He and Lille consummate their love on a hill overlooking the Meuse River. Jim promises to return. However, his next visit is delayed by the Battle of the Bulge. Once again, Jim and his platoon gain accolades for rescuing survivors of the Malmedy massacre. He is promoted to sergeant and given command of the platoon when his commanding officer is severely wounded.

The Battle of the Bulge has made it difficult for the division to receive mail. As the battle wanes, Jim’s unit receive their delayed mail. He gets five letters from Lille, each promising her love to him. She writes that he has inspired her to go to Antwerp to study nursing. As Jim finishes that letter, another member of the squad reads out loud that an army newspaper reports a movie theater in Antwerp was hit by a V-2 rocket. The theater was playing a Gary Cooper film. Fearfully, Jim opens a letter from a friend of Lille’s. It informs him she was killed by the rocket.

Immediately after receiving the letter, the platoon is sent on a mission to rescue a Belgian family. They arrive at the family’s house in Faymonville, Belgium. It is occupied by a German soldier and the dead bodies of the entire family. Enraged, Jim reacts with murderous intent. His friend, Dave Harris, tries to stop him. Failing that, Dave works to salvage Jim’s psyche as the platoon moves on to the last battles of the war, the crossing of the Roer and Rhine rivers and battles in Germany. Dave constantly reminds Jim of his need to forgive the Germans and himself. Harris is wounded at the battle of Magdeburg. Jim becomes estranged from his unit. It is in the aftermath of a visit to Magdeburg Cathedral that Jim faces his final crisis.

ISBN/ASIN: 978-1-55571-982-1,

Book Format(s): Soft cover, Kindle

Review Genre: Fiction—Historical Fiction

Number of Pages: 302

Dreams of Winter: A Forgotten Gods Tale #1 by Christian Warren Freed

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Click on cover image to purchase a copy

MWSA Review
Author Christian Warren Freed has given us an epic science fiction fantasy in his book Dreams of Winter, A Forgotten Gods Tale. Set in a world, a universe, and a time of its own, Freed has gathered together a fascinating group of characters. Mere mortals have to share this story with Blood Witches, sons of gods, strange creatures, and even a Dark Council. The tale Freed spins is a fascinating one that will keep you reading. This is a classic good versus evil story with the lines often blurred. The characters themselves question their purpose, and the outcome is never certain. As the book evolves, the reader can't help but wonder if there is a mystical hand drawing everyone toward a common conclusion. This is a complicated book, but one that true Sci Fi fans will enjoy.

Review by Bob Doerr (April 2021) 

Author's Synopsis
It is a troubled time, for the old gods are returning and they want the universe back…

Under the rigid guidance of the Conclave, the seven hundred known worlds carve out a new empire with the compassion and wisdom the gods once offered. But a terrible secret, known only to the most powerful, threatens to undo three millennia of progress. The gods are not dead at all. They merely sleep. And they are being hunted.

Senior Inquisitor Tolde Breed is sent to the planet Crimeat to investigate the escape of one of the deadliest beings in the history of the universe: Amongeratix, one of the fabled THREE, sons of the god-king. Tolde arrives on a world where heresy breeds insurrection and war is only a matter of time. Aided by Sister Abigail of the Order of Blood Witches, and a company of Prekhauten Guards, Tolde hurries to find Amongeratix and return him to Conclave custody before he can restart his reign of terror.

What he doesn’t know is that the Three are already operating on Crimeat.

ISBN/ASIN: 978-0-578-64585-8, 9781735700038, B0794D68MX

Book Format(s): Soft cover, Kindle, ePub/iBook

Review Genre: Fiction—Horror/Fantasy/Sci Fi

Number of Pages: 382

Volunteer: A Vietnam War Odyssey by Bob Stockton

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Click on cover image to purchase a copy

MWSA Review
Bob Stockton fell back on his extensive career in the Navy to publish Volunteer: A Vietnam Odyssey. A compilation of his three previously published (and successful) novellas, the story follows a Navy sailor through his deployments during the Vietnam War. It is a work of fiction, but it is based on historical accounts and also the author's own experience.

The book has action, humor, and plenty of "liberty incidents" to make any vet reminisce fondly. I particularly liked the way the main character was very unassuming; he did some very important work, but to him he was just doing his job for his country, a sentiment to which many veterans can relate. It is an easy read that will spark many different memories for the intended audience.

Vietnam veterans, especially those from the Navy, will enjoy this book, as will any "tin can" sailor of the last fifty years or so. 

Review by Rob Ballister (May 2021)
 

Author's Synopsis
Eighteen-year old Zack Martin is determined to leave his Lubbock home where he has endured ridicule and scorn from his abusive father. His mother’s recent death has given Zack the push to join the Navy where he is certain that he will find adventure – and test his courage by volunteering to serve in ships that will be sent into harm’s way in the emerging Vietnam conflict.

Author Bob Stockton has revised and consolidated his three earlier Vietnam War novellas – Mediterranean Suicide, Friendly Fire and The Third Tour into “Volunteer,” a re-written and re-formatted hard-hitting, fast-paced novel that places the reader directly in the heart of the action.

ISBN/ASIN: 9781662901560, B089PT1C9N

Book Format(s): Soft cover, Kindle

Review Genre: Fiction—Literary Fiction

Number of Pages: 439

Liberian Gold by Patrick Sydor

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Click on cover image to purchase a copy

MWSA Review
Patrick Sydor paints a vivid picture of life in Liberia during a time of unrest in Liberian Gold. The CIA comes back into Nick’s life just as he seems to have put his life back together from a traumatic mission in the past. His physical wounds have healed but the mental and emotional scars are very real and just under the surface, ready to burst forth at the slightest provocation. He leaves the love of his life, Eliz, for an easy non-combat mission, or so he thinks. The money is good and he’ll be home in a couple of months. Neither Nick nor Eliz realizes that Nick will return with more physical and mental scars, a changed man.

The author introduces Abby, a seductive woman NGO aid worker, seemingly in place to distract Nick. He forgets the love of his life, Eliz, and succumbs to infidelity during a time when both their lives are threatened.

The author has written extensive scene descriptions, and it is hard to keep track of all the players: government and non-government. Each of the entities has similar motivations but different ways to achieve their ultimate goal. Liberian Gold is an interesting read if you like a history of a small West African government.

Review by Nancy Panko (April 2021)

Author's Synopsis
The CIA came calling just as Nick was feeling somewhat normal again. An easy, non-dangerous mission. It's good money. He agrees.

But, as he gets closer to the truth, his enemies multiply and the danger escalates. With Liberia in flames and friends' lives at stake, he must make the right decision.

ISBN/ASIN: 9798642756508

Book Format(s): Soft cover, Kindle

Review Genre: Fiction—Thriller

Number of Pages: 387

Heirloom (A Kate Tyler Novel) by Nancy Wakeley

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Click on cover image to purchase a copy

MWSA Review
How do you continue to live after you experience the perfect storm of job loss, relationship betrayal, and the death of your twin? Any one of those occurrences can lead to heartbreak and confusion, but if all three happen in close proximity, you must learn to adapt to your new circumstances—if you want to survive.

Kate, who always considered herself the weaker twin after their adoptive parents died, is truly alone now and feels ill-equipped to experience life without the support her sister always seemed to provide. Inheriting property she didn’t know her twin had recently purchased, Kate decides to honor her sister’s memory by at least looking at the house before selling it. She struggles to overcome the debilitating inertia of grief and makes her way to Eden Springs, a small town in North Carolina, only to discover that the house and land have fallen into complete disrepair.

Kate’s journey of personal growth begins as she entertains the notion that she might not be as weak as she had always assumed. She leans into her grief, accepts life as it is, and grows stronger, while still allowing others to come alongside to support her.

Beautiful descriptions and emotional scenes are interspersed with action scenes. Quirky characters are added for comic relief, while sinister individuals provide additional conflict to keep the plot moving swiftly to its conclusion.

I hope the author has more stories to tell. I look forward to her next book.

Review by Betsy Beard (March 2021) 

 

Author's Synopsis
Kate Tyler is already in a life crisis when she inherits Howard's Walk in Eden Springs, North Carolina, after the sudden death of her twin sister, Rebecca. The last thing she wants is to be tied down to an abandoned estate and its neglected once-famous gardens. She vows to sell it as quickly as possible.

But on her first visit to Howard's Walk, Kate finds a family heirloom, an embroidered tablecloth, that Rebecca has left behind. That connection, and the deepening sense of loss she is feeling, convince her to stay--at least for a little while. As Kate struggles alone in her grief, healing appears in the form of new friends and neighbors.

When secrets begin to surface within the old house, she questions the connection she feels with a mentally challenged young man from the farm next door. When she meets the owner of a local garden center, she begins to open her heart again to the possibility of love. When she learns that a powerful and vengeful man who was denied ownership of Howard's Walk in the past is determined to finally own it at any cost, Kate must decide what Howard's Walk means to her and whether she has the strength to battle for its survival as well as her own.

ISBN/ASIN: 978-1-61153-373-6, 978-1-61153-374-3

Book Format(s): Soft cover, Kindle

Review Genre: Fiction—Historical Fiction

Number of Pages: 267