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Showing 1 - 25 of
61 matches in All Departments
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burners (Paperback)
Deb Cavanaugh, Bob Mayer
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R373
Discovery Miles 3 730
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Mind control is only the first step... World domination is the
next... Much like Men Who Stares at Goats, Psychic Warrior is a
fictional tale taken straight from the pages of the once classified
Trojan Warrior Program in Special Forces and written by someone who
was in the unit and went through the training. Bob Mayer, former
Green Beret understands first hand how the results of taking
warfare into the virtual plane through avatars and then reinserting
covert operatives into the real world can be devastating. Bright
Gate. HAARP. Remote Viewers. U.S. military operations so top secret
that not even the president knew they existed. Now they have
produced an elite group of commandos able to leave their bodies -
and their souls - to fight anywhere, anytime, using the persuasive
power of the human mind. Sergeant Major Jimmy Dalton is one of
them. An ex-Green Beret, a man with no family, no ties, and nothing
to lose, Dalton knows the most dangerous weapon in any arsenal is
the mind. Among the first Psychic Warriors to be battle tested on
the virtual plane, Dalton has seen up close the damage and
destruction the new weapons can cause. The memory will haunt him
the rest of his days. However, Dalton has a new set of enemies.
Enemies that have existed for millennia. First, the Mithrans hiding
in the peaks of the Himalayas and the other, the Priory,
manipulating mankind in the shadows of the power elite. The
technology that allows Dalton to be a Psychic Warrior gives these
two groups the opportunity to battle each to the death. If they
happen to wipe out mankind in the process, so be it. The race is on
to seize power and it falls to Dalton and his team to stop both the
Priory and the Mithrans before they destroy all of humanity.
The Green Berets: Chasing The Lost Horace Chase arrives on Hilton
Head Island to pay his last respects at the Intracoastal Waterway
where his late mother's ashes were spread and to inspect the home
his mother left him in her will. He's been recently forced into
retirement, his divorce is officially final, and now he's standing
in the middle of the front yard of his 'new' house where a tree has
crashed right through the center of it. What could possibly go
wrong? Within six hours of arriving on Hilton Head, Chase is
exchanging gunfire with men who've kidnapped a young boy and tried
to grab the boy's mother, Sarah Briggs. Soon he's waist deep in an
extortion plot to funnel a hundred million dollars of Superbowl
on-line gambling money into an offshore bank account or else the
boy dies. Dave Riley has long retired from the military and living
peacefully on sleepy Dafuskie Island off the coast of South
Carolina. Sort of. Actually he's bored, feeling old, and just a bit
cranky running his deceased uncle's small-time bookie operation.
Horace Chase, meet Dave Riley. Riley-Chase. Chase and Riley
assemble a team of misfits and eccentrics as they take on the
powerful Russian mob in the lawless tidal lands of the Low Country
to get the boy back. Meet Erin: Chase's long-ago summer fling, now
a veterinarian and not interested in men any more, at least that
way. But her suturing skills and her knowledge of the island bring
assets the team needs. Especially after Chase's first visit with
the Russian requires a bit of the former. Meet Gator: an ex-Ranger,
iron-pumping, fire-breathing hulk of a redneck, with a soft spot in
his heart for Erin, and steroids burning in his muscles to hurt
people. As long as Riley and Chase point him in the right
direction, the rest of the populace should be all right. Meet Kono:
a Gullah, descendant of the free slaves who fled to the barrier
islands in the 19th century and developed their own culture. He
nurses his own pain and secrets, but heeds Chase's call to renew
their childhood friendship. Especially when he learns the target is
the Russians. It adds up to a fiery confrontation to rescue the
young boy, and settle some old scores. But Riley and Chase need to
remember a basic tenet from their days in covert operations:
Nothing is ever as it appears.
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