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More Than Courage |
List Price: $25.95
Your Price: $17.65 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
Rating:  Summary: Disappointing effort - Skip it - read Coyle's other work Review: Substandard research from an author who generally does a great job. I have read all of his novels and have a high regard for him and his work, but the preponderance of errors and gross assumptions ruined what could have been a good novel. His story line could have worked but his narrative was fantasy and actually an insult to Special Operations. -Armored Cav tactics, manning, and equipment are not the same as Long Range Surveillance units or SF A-teams -TF 160 is an Army unit, not Air Force -3-75 is at Benning, not Lewis, & idea of OPFOR 1LT getting command of a Ranger company (main effort no less) while other command-experienced CPTs get passed over is ludricrous -Airborne procedures are inaccurate -knows the cost of precision guidance kits for bombs but doesn't know the M-60 MG has been replaced by the M-240G -there are many more problems with the technical details... For a much better accouting of how a spec ops unit on a LRS mission might operate before, during, and after capture, check out non-fiction "Bravo Two Zero" by Andy McNabb.
Rating:  Summary: Annoying Review: The author knows his stuff, but disappoints when, after introducing characters we care about, has them disappear without detail and off-stage.
Rating:  Summary: Great story, couple of technical innaccuracies Review: The story is thoroughly entertaining and presents a fairly ugly picture of captivity with a non-romanticized version of the dedication to bringing comrades home. Coyle demonstrates many of the practical concerns of a large rescue mission for a handful of men and the some of macropsychology of preparing men for combat. He had a half dozen or so minor spelling errors that slowed down my reading (a little) so that I could make sure I knew what was being said. I might have missed something but he seemed to have flip-flopped two of his characters' ranks or positions (I probably missed something) which also slowed me down for a moment. The two technical things are these: "Task Force 160" as Coyle uses it is not an Air Force organization. It's the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment of the US Army. Number two is this: the US Navy doesn't operate the AC-130 gunship, the Air Force does. Ignore these and the handful of spelling issues and the book is a great read.
Rating:  Summary: Appropriate and Timely Review: We have enjoyed many Coyle novels, starting with Team Yankee and including the several stories relating the military career of Scott Dixon, and even his son. He has done a wonderful job of describing the professional soldier and his (and her) sacrifices to defend the United States. More Than Courage may be his best, possibly excepting The Ten Thousand. In this novel he describes the relationships which develop within a unit and the loyalties between warriors, as well as the travails of prisoners of war in the modern era. Coyle's prescience is amazing. Published in April, 2003, as the major fighting of Operation Iraqi Freedom is ending, this book eerily describes an environment where US special operations units are operating in Syria to identify and locate chemical and biological weapons sites hidden in Syria as the Saddam regime ended in Iraq. A Syrian patrol happens upon a recon team as it is deployed around a potential site, breaks up the team's operation, and captures several of its members. The story relates the capture, the aftermath for the team members, and the efforts to obtain their release, ending finally with a rescue operation. In relating this story, Coyle is most critical of the media and the way some of them ignore any traces of taste or judgement in their drive to get a story. He is also critical of the way the media may drive and bias an event in order to generate more drama-assisted by politicians whose major concern is getting in the news. More than Courage is a good story, and will be still be a good read next year. But the timing of its publication makes it a fitting tribute to POW's returning now, and those still missing. There is no way we can offer sufficient tribute to POW/MIA's. As Bill Fornes, a Korean-era POW, related in telling his story (Walking Through a Spider's Web, 2001), he was prepared to die for his country-he was not prepared to be a prisoner of war.
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