HOGS 1. Going Deep
β Scribed by James Ferro
- Publisher
- Kindle
- Year
- 2012
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 141 KB
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Always tops in his training classes, Lieutenant BJ Dixon arrives at his new post with the A-10 Warthog unit in the Gulf War eager to prove he has βthe right stuff.β But he canβt seem to impress his by-the-book unit commander, Major βMongooseβ Johnson, who knows that the real test of a Hog pilot is how he reacts for the first time under fire. BJβs first battle mission will push him to the limits of both courage and cowardice in βGoing Deep.β. Hogs #1: Going Deep is the first of six novels in the HOGS First Gulf War series. It follows a colorful group of brave pilots flying A-10 warthogs over the skies of Iraq during the First Gulf War in 1991. #1 New York Times Bestselling Author Jim DeFelice ( American Sniper ), writing under the pen name of James Ferro, based this dramatic, historical action series on the actual events. Filled with blistering action and gritty authenticity, this is a powerful and exciting tribute to the men and women who flew and serviced these no-nonsense, down in the dirtβ flying machines. FB2Library.Elements.CiteItem
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
*A standalone sequel to* Go Wild*.* Beth is the shy, dreamy type. No one guesses at the wild sexual thoughts she hides behind that quiet faΓ§ade. She doesnβt even share her secret longings with her husband. Gavin loves his wife, but heβs tired of living in a marriage in which ne
Welcome back to East Vancouver, Canada - home to hipster-dykes, polyamorous bisexual triads, and a full cast of wise-cracking, straight-talking, sparkly unicorn queers of every ilk. In the highly anticipated sequel to Don't Bang the Barista, Kate's sudden need to return to Vancouver means leaving he
Reading goes to the dogs in this timeless Beginner Book edited by Dr. Seuss. From big dogs and little dogs to red, green, and blue dogs, dogs going up and dogs going fast . . . who knew dogs were so busy? And laughter will ensue at the repeated question "Do you like my hat?" Like P. D. Eastman's cla