Hidden Prey
The Russians are in town and the welcome is anything but warm.
The Russians are in town and the welcome is anything but warm.
Drug dealing nuns and a kidnapping gone awry keep Davenport busy.
Clara Rinker is back and the bodies are falling left and right.
This book is more relevant for large companies with large budgets. Covers all types of events, where I was looking for more trade show specific information.
The Event Marketing Handbook : Beyond Logistics and Planning
A serial killer is loose and Davenport is on the case. Not my favorite genre but hard to put down, nonetheless.
Lucas hits the fashion scene and tries to manage three women vying for his attention. Mike Hammer never had it so good.
Interesting case studies from ten different companies ranging from the Grateful Dead to EMC. Some decent food for thought. Boston Beer story was illuminating. I never knew Sam Adams was made in contract batches at other breweries.
Radical Marketing: From Harvard to Harley, Lessons from Ten That Broke the Rules and Made It Big
Lucas keeps on going. Sandford manages to give glimpses of Davenport’s more human side without making that the focus of the book. There is something to Sandford’s cadence and pace that makes these books hard to put down (IMHO).
Sandford doesn’t hold back and this book can make you flinch at times. Looking forward to reading all I can get my hands on. This guy can write.
One of the most difficult things about Holocaust literature is that the experiences are so brutal as to convey a sense of disbelief. Oswald Rufeisen was a Jewish boy who was able to pass as a Christian and to survive through a combination of luck and smarts. Because he could speak fluent German, he ended up working as an interpreter for the German police and the Belorussian collaborators in 1942 in the city of Mir.
He used his position to help notify nearby villages that they were targeted for liquidation. When he helped orchestrate the escape of over 300 people from the Mir ghetto, his cover was blown. He managed to escape and ended up hiding in the monastery that was right next to the police station. He was then forced to flee into the forests where he was almost executed by the partisans, until people he saved came forward to vouch for him.
By this time he had converted to Christianity. After the war, he became a monk, moved to Haifa and met with the pope. Really interesting discussions on how his conversion was received by others in his family and on his thoughts regarding the evolution of Christianity and its alignment with the Roman Empire.
Detailed account of OSS activities directed towards infiltrating agents into Germany. Efforts had mixed results. Greatest success appeared to come from one German civilian who had access to secret documents and provided them to the OSS. Interesting discussion on the counterfeiting and forging process as well as the plane based radio communication with agents on the ground.
Piercing the Reich: The penetration of Nazi Germany by American secret agents during World War II
Third in the Davenport series. A few surprises, not all of them pleasant. Updated intro by author which sheds some light on his writing habits. Some of the drug descriptions go a little overboard, but I didn’t find myself skimming.
Pulled this off the library bookshelf and the first couple pages hooked me. Deviates from standard cop/murder genre by opening with the murder from the omniscient narrator’s perspective. Sandford doesn’t seem to get hung up on his success and need to prove just how clever he is. Looking forward to reading the entire Davenport series.
Very well written and researched. Reads like a Greek tragedy. Provides clear and concise detail on how the war in Laos evolved from a handful of CIA operatives into massive air bombardment and chaos. Highlights the lack of willingness of the various military departments to coordinate operations.
Cannell definitely has a way with words. The books move at a fast pace. Great for some recreational reading or helping you switch to another track in the evening. A guilty pleasure like having another handful of potato chips.
I enjoyed the first half of this book which deals with the Wilderness and Spotsylvania Courthouse. The remainder was a bit disjointed, as was the campaign itself. A lot of digression to provide the history behind the different leaders. Decent maps.
Lee’s last campaign;: The story of Lee and his men against Grant–1864
Very well written. Provides insight into the characters and a lot of the story lines, especially when there were odd things going on with Schultz.
I’ve read four of the Joe Pickett novels. Usually breaks down to three sections: Joe and his search for the killer, Joe and his family and Joe and the bureaucrats. I wouldn’t call the writing gripping, but it isn’t offensive. Easy to skim the parts you are not interested in. Good for a night when you just rather stay home.
A series of presentations from the Gettysburg conference for Lincoln’s 175th birthday. Many topics and contributors. A bit too academic in places.
The Historian’s Lincoln: Pseudohistory, Psychohistory, and History
A disappointing sophomore effort. Overall premise is weak with Reacher getting caught up in a kidnap of an FBI agent. Half the book deals with the FBI investigation effort to find the missing agent. Boring! On the plus side, it allowed for easy skimming.
I really was hoping that Lee Child would be different from the other “best seller” formulas of wowing the reader with an inundation of technical detail on weapons systems and “secret” practices. No luck. Last book I read by this author.