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Summary
Summary
A catastrophic earthquake ravages Afghanistan, and American troops rush to deliver aid, among them Afghan Air Force adviser Lieutenant Colonel Michael Parson, and his interpreter, Sergeant Major Sophia Gold. The devastation facing them is like nothing they've ever seen, however--and it's about to get worse.
A Taliban splinter group, Black Crescent, is conducting its own campaign--shooting medical workers, downing helicopters, slaughtering anyone who dares to accept aid. With the U.S. drawing down and coalition forces spread thin, it is up to Parson, Gold, and Parson's Afghan aircrews to try to figure out how to strike back. But they're short of supplies, men, experience, and information--and meanwhile the terrorists seem to be nowhere . . . and everywhere.
Author Notes
Tom Young has logged nearly 4,000 hours for the Air National Guard in Iraq, Afghanistan, Bosnia, Kosovo, and elsewhere. The author of The Mullah's Storm and Silent Enemy , Young has studied writing at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the Sewanee Writers' Conference, among other places, and lives in Alexandria, Virginia.
Reviews (4)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Young's experience as a pilot in several war zones informs every line of his riveting third novel featuring Air Force Lt. Col. Michael Parson (after 2011's Silent Enemy). Now an adviser to a helicopter unit in Afghanistan, Parson requests that his interpreter friend, Sgt. Maj. Sophia Gold, be deployed back to Afghanistan to help with relief efforts after a major earthquake. Just as Parson and his team are about to lift off with a number of injured Afghans, members of a terrorist group called the Black Crescent shoot up their helicopter; soon after, they kidnap a 10-year-old boy from a nearby village. Parson and Gold get on the trail of the Crescent leader, Chaaku (the Pashto word for knife), and in a last deadly battle bring a measure of justice to their corner of the war. Young's precise, evocative prose brings a far-off war into sharp-edge focus while honoring the heroic servicemen and women who fight against extraordinary odds. Agent: Michael Carlisle, Inkwell Management. (July) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Kirkus Review
New hell has been visited upon war-torn Afghanistan in Young's (Silent Enemy, 2011, etc.) latest action adventure tale. A devastating earthquake has struck. Villages are left in rubble. Thousands are homeless, exposed and in need of rescue or relief. Into the breach goes U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. Michael Parson, a decorated combat veteran now working as a liaison with the Afghan Air Force. Parson is an experienced navigator and airlift pilot, but even though he isn't a "rotorhead," Parson is working with Capt. Rashid and his crew flying a Soviet-built Mi-17 helicopter. In assisting in organizing and administrating effective Afghan flying units, Parson has requested the help of a colleague from another combat service, Army Sgt. Maj. Sophia Gold, a skilled translator of the Pashto language. The two are soon tossed into a chaotic situation. A Taliban splinter group, the Black Crescent led by Bakht Sahar, known as Chaaku (knife in Pashto), is killing aid workers, disrupting delivery of supplies and, worst of all, taking children hostage to be used as suicide bombers. Young writes solidly about the complex dynamics of Afghan-American interaction. He also explores social differences by having Gold become a vital link in the attempt to wheedle information from one of the wives of Mullah Durrani, veteran of the mujahedin and the Taliban, grown too old to fight. In fact, Gold arranges a clandestine meeting and goes on a rogue mission to see Durrani. From there, she develops information that leads to the discovery of Chaaku's fortress redoubt. Young is an Iraqi-Afghan war veteran, and he treats Afghan allies with due respect, acknowledges difficulties in bridging the gap between cultures and crafts a bad guy worth shooting. His grasp of military terminology, esoteric paraphernalia and ethos are spot-on, but don't expect a ratcheted-up, loss-of-city narrative standard in a Tom Clancy or Dan Brown thriller. The slam-bang, good-guys-win conclusion comes with a well-described battle at Kuh-e Qara Batar, Chaaku's mountain lair. Real-life experience translated into page-turning fiction.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
Michael Parson and Sophia Gold, the heroes of The Mullah's Storm and Silent Enemy, return in another military thriller that should appeal to the author's expanding fan base. Afghanistan is hit by a massive earthquake, and American aid workers are immediately on the scene. But an extremely nasty offshoot of the Taliban is attacking not only the aid workers but also any Afghan citizens who accept foreign aid. Can Parson and Gold execute a plan designed to stop the splinter group in its tracks? Featuring well-drawn characters, natural dialogue, and a story that's both timely and frighteningly plausible, the novel should work for readers of Dale Brown or Larry Bond, although it must be noted that Young is a smoother, more accessible writer than either Brown and Bond: his characters feel more like real people, and his prose style is much more pleasing to the eye. Young is still an up-and-comer, but it shouldn't be long before he's one of the guys other up-and-comers are compared to.--Pitt, David Copyright 2010 Booklist
Library Journal Review
Afghanistan is one of the most tortured places on Earth. Host to what seems to be a never-ending litany of war, it is also prone to massive earthquakes. Thus, when one does strike and the United States tries to send in aid, a splinter Taliban group uses the chaos to launch strikes against the aid workers. Lt. Col. Mike Parson and his interpreter, Sgt. Major Sophia Gold, try to coordinate rescue efforts bringing in badly needed aid, but they first must destroy the Taliban group. As the American military is drawing down its level of forces in the country, Parson and Gold are on their own with little in the way of resources to help them. Verdict Young's third thriller featuring Parson and Gold (The Mullah's Storm; Silent Enemy) is extremely well written and revolves around two people who are trying hard to do the right thing under incredibly brutal conditions. The war in Afghanistan is particularly hellish, which will, sadly, limit readership appeal of this title. Purchase for demand. [See Prepub Alert, 1/8/12.]-Robert Conroy, Warren, MI (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.