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A Paleobotanical wonder is discovered and it's called Blue Water. It seeps from its fatal beginnings in the Antarctic to its miscalculated use in a Carson City reservoir with tragic results. It then moves on to Luton, England where it's expected to bring the British Prime Minister to bargain away Northern Ireland. Its spread inspires an Arab terrorist to make all of Europe a bargaining chip for his dream of Palestine becoming a new nation. Captain Eric Stone is charged by the President to stop the blackmail of international heads of state. Alice Justice TV news reporter decides to pursue for her career and viewers, the dangerous and near fatal course of the Blue Water. Her investigation leads her to cross paths with Captain Stone in Dublin, Ireland, an unexpected pleasure for both of them.
Everyone loves Tangerine Clements, but Travis is the man she marries. Tangie could chop your head off with an ax, he often says, and you would finish up blaming the ax itself. When one of Tangies former lovers is found dead, apparently suicide, he leaves a journal that claims she is planning to kill him. His dead body is surrounded by exactly 323 tangerines. The police investigate but find no evidence of anything other than a mentally disturbed man killing himself. Two years pass. Then another dead body is discovered. Again there are 323 tangerines. The game has begun.
A peaceful journey under sail on a classic yacht turns into a gut-wrenching nightmare for a beautiful, manipulative, and not-so-innocent young woman.A distraught father enlists the aid of some shady characters from his past to find out what happened to his footloose daughter.Mike Reilly's escape from his horrific past to the soothing environment of Caribbean yachting comes with some baggage.Bluewater Killer. Buy it today, but don't start reading until you have time to finish it.Bluewater Killer is the first book of the Bluewater Series. Look for Bluewater Vengeance early in 2012.
The story of a close encounter between a woman and a whale, told from the perspective of both protagonists. A scientific project studying blue whales takes a strange turn when one of the whales and Miriam, the team's statistician, discover that they share a mystic telepathic communication.
Emily Hunter is a woman suffering. She is finally making strides at living independently after being mandated to residential psychiatric care for most of her adult life. Now, holding down a night shift job, taking her medication regularly, and meeting with her therapist twice a week, she's finally on solid ground — or so she thinks. Amongst Emily’s frequent delusions is a hallucination of a little girl in purple pajamas that she has come to call “Carrot.” In the past, Emily believed that Carrot was real, and that the little girl desperately needed help. Her visions of this child have always been strong and surreal. Now they're becoming too powerful to ignore. Carrot is guiding Emily. Determined to find the answers, Emily starts down a deadly and terrifying path, following Carrot into madness.
Missouri, the Show-Me State, is home to a diverse population, including...The Psychic Circle, a for-profit collection of not-very-talented psychics, overseen by Helene, their extra-perceptive manager... Jasper, a Native American undercover agent who once trusted only what his five senses revealed... A precocious six-year-old, Sylvester the Scion... The 90-year-old Shakespeare Club, an ensemble of senior citizens who keep their secrets close to home, and give Possum Billy the opportunity to know Gerry, a lady whosees more than she tells... And ruthless killers. Untangling the affairs leading to murder often demands more than one mind, andmore than one way of seeing. Especially when there are enough decades-old secrets greed, hatred and intrigue to fill the pages of a book. Amid such evil passions, may tender feelings emerge?
Contributions to Naval History No. 6. Presents Professor Muir's account of the thirty-year development of surface warfare capabilities, especially within the Navy's cruiser and destroyer force. Pays particular attention to the development of weapons, the evolution of sensors and command and control systems, and the institutional steps taken to professionalize the surface warfare community.
From riverine operations in the American Civil War and China in the 1860s to the major fleet engagements of the World Wars, plus more recent naval actions in the Falklands/Malvenas War and Gulf War, Lindberg and Todd methodically show how geography has shaped the strategy, tactics, and tools of naval warfare. Alfred T. Mahan was perhaps the first naval professional to recognize and acknowledge fully the influence of geography on navies and naval warfare. Many of his principles of seapower were inherently geographical and influenced both what kind of naval force a state would possess and how it would be utilized. In the time that has passed since Mahan made his observations, naval warfare and navies have experienced major technological changes, yet geographical factors continue to exert their influence on how navies fight, how they are structured, and the design of the ships that they deploy. After providing a comprehensive review of geostrategic theory and its application to naval warfare, the book is organized by major operational environments in which such warfare occurs--the high seas, littoral regions, and inland waterways. Lindberg and Todd illustrate how such geographical factors as distance, location, surface, and subsurface conditions influence naval operations, including fleet-to-fleet engagements, amphibious assault, coastal defense, logistical support, and riverine actions. A separate chapter takes an in-depth look at the ways in which geography influences navies themselves with issues such as primary mission type, force structure development, and ship design. Through the use of historical case studies, this volume applies long held geographical concepts to fundamental naval theories and practices to illustrate just how pervasive geography's influence has been during the past 140 years.
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • “Talty’s vigorous history of seventeenth-century pirates of the Caribbean [is] a pleasure to read from bow to stern.”—Entertainment Weekly “In Stephan Talty’s hands, the brilliant Captain Morgan, wicked and cutthroat though he was, proves an irresistible hero. . . . A thrilling and fascinating adventure.”—Caroline Alexander, author of The Endurance and The Bounty The passion and violence of the age of exploration and empire come to vivid life in this story of the legendary pirate who took on the greatest military power on earth with a ragtag bunch of renegades. Awash with bloody battles, political intrigues, natural disaster, and a cast of characters more compelling, bizarre, and memorable than any found in a Hollywood swashbuckler, Empire of Blue Water brilliantly re-creates the life and times of Henry Morgan and the real pirates of the Caribbean.
Wilburn, Arizona is a dying town full of broken people. A town with a violent past and a festering grudge held against all those responsible for its plight. When feisty graduate student, Lyla Amir, comes to the town to research the 1918 lynching of a black farmer and his wife by the people of Wilburn, she becomes the catalyst for a series of transformative events that will rewrite the town's history and give it a chance for redemption.