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Books in The Light Warriors series

  • Strike Eagle: Flying the F-15E in the Gulf War

    William L. Smallwood

    Mass Market Paperback (University of Nebraska Press, Sept. 1, 2005)
    Written by a pilot for the non-aviator, Strike Eagle puts the reader inside the cockpit of one of the world’s most advanced fighters―the F-15E. It is a human-scale account of men at war.
  • God's Samurai: Lead Pilot at Pearl Harbor

    Gordon W. Prange, Donald M. Goldstein, Katherine V. Dillon

    Mass Market Paperback (Potomac Books publisher, Nov. 1, 2003)
    God's Samurai is the unusual story of Mitsuo Fuchida, the career aviator who led the attack on Pearl Harbor and participated in most of the fiercest battles of the Pacific war. A valuable record of major events, it is also the personal story of a man swept along by his times. Reared in the vanished culture of early twentieth-century Japan, war hero Fuchida returned home to become a simple farmer. After a scandalous love affair came his remarkable conversion to Christianity and years of touring the world as an evangelist. His tale is an informative, personal look at the war "from the other side."
  • Beyond Sedona

    Lucia Ashta

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, March 8, 2018)
    Destiny and love can overcome anything... even death. Long ago, a prophecy foretold the birth of twins who would have the power to change the world. The prophecy came true, but not in the way anyone expected. Eons later, Lena finds herself at the end of a miserable marriage. Depressed and beaten down, she embarks on a journey of self-discovery by giving herself over to fate. As fate dictates, she books a one-way ticket to the small town of Sedona, where nothing is as it seems. Including her. She soon discovers a side of life mired in mystery and mystique. And somehow she is at the center of it all—along with the handsome stranger whose amber eyes match hers.
  • Warthog: Flying the A-10 in the Gulf War

    William L. Smallwood

    Mass Market Paperback (University of Nebraska Press, Sept. 1, 2005)
    A valentine for one of the ugliest, albeit most lethally effective, warplanes ever built--as well as for the men who flew them during the Desert Storm campaign. Drawing on interviews with over one hundred A-10 pilots who served in the Persian Gulf during the 1990-91 hostilities, Smallwood (himself an aviator and Korean War vet) offers riveting perspectives on aerial combat. Setting the stage with an informative briefing on how, in the 70's, the Air Force developed the A-10 (a.k.a. ``Warthog'') as a means of supporting ground troops with massive firepower, he moves into anecdotal vignettes detailing the ways in which so-called ``hog drivers'' and their commanders whiled away the weary hours of the calm before the storm in Saudi Arabia's inhospitable clime. At the heart of his narrative, however, are vivid accounts of how A-10s accomplished their tank-busting missions and then some once the battle was joined. Tasked, among other objectives, to take out missile launchers and artillery emplacements far behind the front lines (assignments normally reserved for jet fighters), the slow-moving, heavily armed Warthogs were credited with over half the bomb damage inflicted on Iraqi forces and installations. Employing improvisational tactics, A-10s also flew reconnaissance and assisted in rescues of coalition pilots; they even scored air-to- air kills, downing a couple of enemy choppers. Indeed, the plane's ungainly Gatling-gun platform performed so well that pilots demanded their craft be redesignated ``RFOA-10'' (for ``reconnaissance/fighter/observation/attack'').
  • Dwight David Eisenhower: The Warring Peacemaker

    Allan Carpenter, Wesley Klug

    Library Binding (Rourke Pub Group, Oct. 1, 1987)
    Chronicles the life and career of the West Point graduate who became a World War II commander, and later the thirty-fourth President of the United States
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