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MGySgt. Travis Tolbane, retired United States Marine Corps, started his thirty-year Marine Corps career in Parris Island, South Carolina, as most marines did. He worked hard, earned respect from all, and earned his promotions, some meritorious. While serving in Viet Nam, he became trusted by the Corps and was involved in several hush-hush, covert operations. Working with a Naval Investigative Service (NIS) agent, the beautiful Vietnamese lady Phuoc, in secret operations, they encountered many dangers and hardships together, overcoming each one. He saved her life on two occasions but not on the third on a compromised operation. He and Phuoc had been lovers from the beginning of their relationship. The betrayal tore into his very heart and soul. "Vengeance is mine," said Travis Tolbane. But would he have his vengeance?
At the end of the sixteenth century, Troung Van Ba was a devoted agent to the secret No Name Society. He was given an assignment to obtain a precious icon, a jade cross, from a Chinese master craftsman in China. The cross was to be a uniting icon to unite Dai Viet and Annam. He knew his trek would be long, difficult, and perilous. There would be stations at some subhamlets along the way for food, rest, and updates on trail hardships, as well as the possibility of robbers. At one such subhamlet, he was told the route had been changed because of a compromise and was informed he now had a sixteen-year-old guide, Tran Thi Mot, at which he rebelled. During the trek, there would be hardships in their travel, attacks by bandits and the No Name's enemies, finding a true friend, delivering the cross, and of course, love.
Master Gunnery Sergeant Travis Tolbane, USMC (Ret.) has been enjoying his retirement, not knowing he is about to embark on his most dangerous journey. He found a place to live in Mount Juliet and a desirable job as a mall security manager in Nashville, Tennessee, after leaving his beloved Corps. He finds what he believes will be the love of his life. He's not aware that her life is in serious danger due to his catching a thief while serving in Vietnam. The thief eventually becomes the leader of all snatch-and-grab gangs in Middle Tennessee. His obsession of hate for Tolbane drives his life to fulfill his obsession of cutting Tolbane to death, luring him through Tolbane's love for the lovely Kaila Al Noor. Will this be Tolbane's demise or something else?
For millennia, Tol has known peace, but now ancient fears resurface as the northern empire of Nordinium invades the Southlands. Amidst the chaos, two young orphans, Perrin and Bren, are thrust into a struggle far beyond their understanding. Sent to the remote village of Hightop, they unknowingly hold the key to the resistance. Martyn, a seemingly inconsequential tinker with a dubious reputation, is assigned an impossible task: to liberate the Southlands from the oppressive Brocken soldiers. With his uncanny ability to appear in multiple places at once, he must unite the fractured Southlands under a single banner. Allies emerge in unexpected forms, including the elusive elf huntress Chelke, and the legendary wolf riders led by Devron and Varellon. As Martyn navigates the dangers of the occupied territories and works to form alliances, he uncovers a deeper threat involving northern mages' treachery. The real battle looms ahead, as enemies must unite to harness the power needed to push back the darkness. The fate of Tol rests on the rise of the seven ancient warriors, the uniting of the Southlands prince with the Elven heir and revealing the legendary sword, Light Bearer - Chaos Cleaver. Will the fragile peace hold, or will the ancient threat engulf Tol once more?
Master Gunnery Sergeant Travis Tolbane, USMC (Ret), is leaving from an alleyway from his job as a mall security manager when he is ambushed by a trio of Vietnamese. Escaping from it by the arrival of Metro Police, he finds out from his friend, Detective Sergeant Parnell, that Tolbane's friend Ba, his old interpreter from Vietnam, has been mutilated. He; his live-in Vietnamese girlfriend, Mai, who is Ba's half sister; an old Marine friend Parnell; and a Vietnamese priest must stop a maniacal piquerist, who thinks he is the reincarnated Thirteenth Century hero Tran Hung Dao, seeking an iconic Jade Cross and Tolbane's lover, Mai, to rebuild an old society, the No Name. They chase him from Honolulu to Kowloon, Hong Kong, where he leaves a string of bodies, and to Hoi An City, Quang Nam Province, in the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, for a final solution.
MGySgt. Travis Tolbane, retired United States Marine Corps, started his thirty-year Marine Corps career in Parris Island, South Carolina, as most marines did. He worked hard, earned respect from all, and earned his promotions, some meritorious. While serving in Viet Nam, he became trusted by the Corps and was involved in several hush-hush, covert operations. Working with a Naval Investigative Service (NIS) agent, the beautiful Vietnamese lady Phuoc, in secret operations, they encountered many dangers and hardships together, overcoming each one. He saved her life on two occasions but not on the third on a compromised operation. He and Phuoc had been lovers from the beginning of their relationship. The betrayal tore into his very heart and soul. "Vengeance is mine," said Travis Tolbane. But would he have his vengeance?
In more than four hundred interviews with retired and soon-to-retire professors, Lorraine Dorfman uses a case study method to convey the diversity of individual retirement experiences. In doing so, she provides a fuller picture of academic retirement. Her book addresses basic issues in the retirement process, including topics such as preparation for retirement, choosing where to live after retirement, evaluation of the retirement experience, and activity patterns during retirement. Retired professors describe both their professional activities, such as teaching, research, and consulting, their nonprofessional and leisure activities, and their strategies for successful retirement. Based on more than a decade of interviews with retired and retiring professors in the United States and the United Kingdom, Dorfman's study relies on both tape-recorded responses to open-ended questions as well as answers to a written questionnaire. The interviews included professors from a large public research university, three liberal arts colleges, a comprehensive university (all located in the Midwest), and two old civic universities in the U.K. The Sun Still Shone is the first book to provide comparative information on academics from different kinds of institutions in a cross-national context; it also provides comparisons based on academic discipline, gender, and age.