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In Danger's Path
- The Corps, Book 8
- Narrated by: Dick Hill
- Length: 25 hrs and 53 mins
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Summary
Desperate to find someone to unite the battling interests of General Douglas MacArthur, Admiral Chester Nimitz, and OSS Chief "Wild Bill" Donovan, President Franklin D. Roosevelt puts Fleming Pickering in charge of the OSS’s Pacific operations. Immediately, two urgent missions fall into his lap: to contact and rescue a band of former American servicemen and their dependents on the run from the Japanese in the Gobi Desert of Mongolia; and at the same time, to set up a weather station in the Gobi to help direct planned aerial attacks against Japan. Pickering has a free hand to use whomever he pleases, and he is soon surrounded by many of the Marines on whom he has come to rely during the war: men like Ken McCoy, Ed Banning, Jake Dillon, Ernie Zimmerman, and - much to his surprise - a certain hotshot pilot named Malcolm Pickering, his son. Together they will venture in terra very much incognita - and with luck they may even come out alive....
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- 27-04-15
Strong entry to the series
First things first, this book is twice as long as some of the other books in the series, so you get more bang for your buck.
It's a very good entry to the series. The previous book flagged a little during the first half but this book kicks off really well.
It continues the previous book's move to writing in first person about non-American characters, which adds some different flavour and in this case some more emotional storytelling, as you follow the stateless Russian wife of a Marine officer.
If you've read this far into the series I can only assume you like Griffin's writing, and you'll get plenty of his excellent storytelling here.
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