The main character takes us on adventures while occurring during World War Two. The things that happen run from happy to unbelievably sad. This book is well worth the listen.
No war story like it
Review from Left for Dead at Nijmegen →
The main character takes us on adventures while occurring during World War Two. The things that happen run from happy to unbelievably sad. This book is well worth the listen.
in a few short hours this book not only identified my unique personal challenges but shared in detail how to set them right.
I think you have to be a pilot or someone very enthusiastic about aviation to appreciate this. If I wasn’t as knowledgeable about flying as I am, I could see so much of this info going over my head. They go through the entire flight checklist from preflight to installing the chocks with stories peppered..
Love the tribute of Honor this brings to our American servicemen and their amazing stories. Well done
The Good: System apocalypse in the setting is a spreading pandemic instead of the typical flipping of the table. The Bad: Plot crawls at a snail’s pace, and none of the main characters take the situation seriously. Female characters are extremely two-dimensional, one is an eighty-year old woman who shamelessly flirts with Max in every..
I enjoyed hearing about familiar names and places in south side Chicago. The contrast with past events in the city during the timeline of the subject of the book made this an interesting read.
I served in the military when World War II vets were still active and visited bases and reunions. I absolutely enjoyed speaking with them and listening to their stories. I wish I had a rifle to hand to each of them as they spoke with me. I can imagine their eyes Opening wide with a..
As a Bay Area resident for most of my life, I heard so many mispronunciations of names of cities and places. It took away from the author
Loved the character details and storyline. I enjoyed reading both Laura and John’s perspective and was happy they both had the same views on slavery.
