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Clint Adams was lookin' to lay low for a while, waiting for his horse to get healthy. But right after riding into Dawson City, he got bushwhacked—by Leonard Hollitt, a nineteen-year-old kid! The Gunsmith sent him to his maker, but then discovered the kid drew an empty gun! Clint wondered why a man would do this. He figured that a letter the kid wrote to his father might have the answer, so he traveled to Winter Creek to deliver it in person. But the only thing colder than the weather was the way the locals acted when he asked for the old man. After being ambushed and nearly killed, the Gunsmith set out to teach the Hollitts a lesson about the way they treat visitors...
THE GUNSMITH Clint Adams was lookin' to lay low for a while, waiting for his horse to get healthy. But right after riding into Dawson City, he got bushwhacked-by Leonard Hollitt, a nineteen-year-old kid! The Gunsmith sent him to his maker, but then discovered the kid drew an empty gun! Clint wondered why a man would do this. He figured that a letter the kid wrote to his father might have the answer, so he traveled to Winter Creek to deliver it in person. But the only thing colder than the weather was the way the locals acted when he asked for the old man. After being ambushed and nearly killed, the Gunsmith set out to teach the Hollitts a lesson about the way they treat visitors...
"Into War with an Empty Gun is a metaphor for life: the challenges one faces and the courage one musters to overcome them without losing one's self . . . ," writes author Patricia Evans. In his page-turning memoir, Korean War veteran Brownbridge recounts his experience as a reluctant draftee sent to the war's Pork Chop Hill sector; inadequately trained and equipped, he loathes the possibility of taking another man's life as much as he fears the loss of his own. While encountering not only the absurdities of war and close brushes with death, he's assigned to edit his battalion's weekly newsletter. Writing about daily acts of heroism of soldiers in battle, he develops respect, admiration and a fierce loyalty for his comrades. Their sacrifices and the war death of a close friend of his youth have haunted him ever since. Unexpectedly struck down by violent seizures, Brownbridge is misdiagnosed in a MASH unit as a "war hysteric," and is returned to duty until months later he is felled again. Hospitalized eventually in Tokyo, he is close to death but endures when the forbidden love of a young WAC medical tech gives him the will to survive the darkest time of his life. Lt. Col. Mike Thomas, Veteran of Operation Enduring Freedom (Afghanistan) writes, "The reality of a soldier's life in war as told by Korean War veteran Robert Brownbridge is as relevant today as it was 60 years ago. His story is a source of inspiration to the soldiers of our most recent wars, many of whom struggle to find their way back. The moving memoir shows it is not enough to just survive a war; one must continue to love and be loved so that one can walk back into life when the war is over."
"The series of books entitled "The machine gun" was begun with the belief that the next best thing to actual knowledge is knowing where to find it. The research summarized within the covers of these volumes has been compiled by the Bureau of Ordinance, Department of the Navy, in order to place in the hands of those rightfully interested in the art of automatic weapon design, the world's recorded progress in this field of endeavor."--Vol. II, p. v.
"The series of books entitled "The machine gun" was begun with the belief that the next best thing to actual knowledge is knowing where to find it. The research summarized within the covers of these volumes has been compiled by the Bureau of Ordinance, Department of the Navy, in order to place in the hands of those rightfully interested in the art of automatic weapon design, the world's recorded progress in this field of endeavor."--Vol. II, p. v.
"The series of books entitled "The machine gun" was begun with the belief that the next best thing to actual knowledge is knowing where to find it. The research summarized within the covers of these volumes has been compiled by the Bureau of Ordinance, Department of the Navy, in order to place in the hands of those rightfully interested in the art of automatic weapon design, the world's recorded progress in this field of endeavor."--Vol. II, p. v.