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Unique Features of this book include:
.... the chapter on Korean War flying aces, and the air war in general. One can still feel the chill that must have gone down the spines of officials in Washington when Soviet MiGs first appeared in the skies over Korea; but it doesn't seem to have bothered John Bolt, the War's only Marine Ace, very much.
.... the chapter on Korean War vets who returned home to their hometowns; some to a hero's welcome, others to a country that had begun to change. I once heard a Korean War vet tell me he left to ragtime and came home to rock and roll. In any case, sometimes the publicity was a mixed blessing for the men, who just wanted to get back to their private and family lives.
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These questions are answered in this well-written novel by Alfred Coppel. The characters (both Allied and Japanese) are fully developed, and the story places them in rather interesting situations.
The story is extremely depressing, however, and leaves the reader wishing for a happier ending.
Great story for a movie.
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The introductory chapter is quite effective in setting the stage for later developments. One of the KGB's top operatives, Colonel Choy Balsan, is alone on horseback in Red China, seeking to find information about a supersecret laser cannon, the dragon of the title, so that he may destroy it. He fails in his mission, but he manages to radio its location to his superiors in Moscow before he is captured by Red Chinese soldiers. When Balsan runs out of bullets, Coppel's writing style effectively sets a manly prose style so lacking in others who try but fail to capture the essence of a man buying time with his life: 'It was then that he knelt, and drew the double-reflex horn bow of his ancestors. Five young soldiers of the People's Liberation Army fell with Mongol arrows in them, dying an archaic death as the armored vehicle, spitting machine-gun fire like some mythic Asian monster, rolled over Choy Balsan.'
Fully half of the book is from the perspective of the top leadership of the communist party. The First Secretary of the Soviet Union, Valentin Kirov, the absolute ruler of all the Russias, is a sick and dying man, but he knows not only of the danger posed by the Dragon but also suspects that his top soldier, Defense Minister Leonov, is plotting a coup. Yet, he does not see a connection between the two. Leonov plans to destroy the Dragon using nuclear missiles at his command from his base, thus presenting his boss with a fait accompli: follow up the limited strike on the Dragon with a general full strike on all of China's nuclear bases. The plot then involves the working out of his hopes. Along the way, the reader finds the expected sex scenes with full-breasted female Russian military officers seducing those who stand as a threat to Leonov. Further, the reader learns of the inner workings of the top leadership of the Chinese communist Politburo. There is plot, counterplot, assasination, and last minute strategies that will determine the fate of the world. Coppel manages to convince the reader that if history did not actually turn out the way that he says it might have, then the reader will easily accept the result of the last few chapters. Coppel is such a talent that when I finished his book, I felt that I knew his alternate reality better than I did the actual one, and that, I think, is the hallmark of any top-notch writer of fiction.
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Although the title focuses attention on the ship itslef, Glory is really the tale of a young girl and her autistic-savant companion bth of whom will be recruited to the greatest adventure available to any human being: to become crew members of the light-sail ship Gloria Coelius. Set against the background of a stunted and regressive Afrikaner society isolated on a lonely, far-flung planet, the novel resonates with interwoven themes of cruelty, sadness, repression, wisdom and, finally, joy.
As the crew of Glory search for an ailing member of their crew, the Black Clavius, they become enmeshed in the family turmoil of young Broni and her friend, the deceptively slow-witted Bruele. As the crew of Glory struggles to understand a society inexplicably hostile to them, they lose one member of their crew and another is critically injured in a flare-up of local factional disputes. In the end, the two youngsters, each possessed of a staggering potential unsuspected by the population with whom they have lived their entire lives, render aid to the crew and are subswequently added as new members of the ship's company.
Underappreciated at the time of its release, Glory is an unsuspected gem of a read. Highly recommended!
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Coppel's writings are essential for anyone that can remember East vs. West, political upheavels, and the secrecy of international intrigues.
Or wants to...
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