17,99 €
inkl. MwSt.

Versandfertig in über 4 Wochen
  • Broschiertes Buch

“...immediately became engrossed in this exciting, thoughtful, eye-opening, and heartfelt tale.” - Jon Michael Miller, Readers Favorite “Filled with action and intrigue, Apricots is a thoroughly engaging blockbuster of a novel where the breakneck pace of the plot and the absorbing narrative never lets your attention waver for a single moment...If you enjoy reading action-packed military fiction novels, Apricots is the book for you.” - Pikasho Deka, Readers Favorite Lieutenant Robert Forrest joined the Marines because his father was a Marine. His whole life he felt the pull of patriotism rooted…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
“...immediately became engrossed in this exciting, thoughtful, eye-opening, and heartfelt tale.” - Jon Michael Miller, Readers Favorite “Filled with action and intrigue, Apricots is a thoroughly engaging blockbuster of a novel where the breakneck pace of the plot and the absorbing narrative never lets your attention waver for a single moment...If you enjoy reading action-packed military fiction novels, Apricots is the book for you.” - Pikasho Deka, Readers Favorite Lieutenant Robert Forrest joined the Marines because his father was a Marine. His whole life he felt the pull of patriotism rooted in his Marine Corps upbringing. But after the Vietnam war, he doubts the Country he’s sworn to serve. The collapse of the Republic of Vietnam in 1975 confirmed defeat of the U.S. – and the wasted sacrifice of 58,000 American lives. Getting killed for a lost cause in an unnecessary War is Forrest’s greatest fear. In 1983, eight years after Saigon fell, Lieutenant Robert Forrest leads a Marine platoon bound for Beirut. Along the way, the Marines invade Grenada and then move on to Beirut. Can Forrest reconcile his service with his doubts? Will the Marines all make it out alive? Or will Forrest’s worst fears be realized? Set against the backdrop of a post-Vietnam world, Apricots tells the harrowing story of one Lieutenant and his platoon as they fight in Grenada, the last Combat of the Cold War, and then move onto Beirut to fight the first battles in the War on Terror.
Autorenporträt
John E. Holloway grew up in Williamsburg, Virginia. He graduated from the Virginia Military Institute in 1981 and was then commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the United States Marine Corps. He deployed with Second Battalion, Eighth Marines, in October 1983 and participated in the invasion of Grenada and operations in Beirut. In 1987, he graduated from the George Mason University School of Law (now the Antonin Scalia Law School), where he was the editor-in-chief of the law review. After clerking for a federal judge, he has practiced maritime law in Virginia since 1988. He has been published by The Sewanee Review and the Tulane Maritime Law Journal.