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Storming Heaven

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Terrorists are holding America under siege. Their method is as ingenious as it is deadly: using commercial aircraft purchased from a failing domestic airline, they deploy bombs out of a modified rear-entry stair on unsuspecting and critical targets. The first attack is on Los Angeles International Airport. Thousands are killed, closing down air traffic and creating a national panic. As the country watches helplessly in horror, a second airliner flies over Dallas/Fort Worth and drops a bomb on the main control tower. The President orders Lieutenant General Robert Blocker to re-establish security in the skies before the White House is next. Blocker's response to the crisis is drastic, as it needs to be...until the terrorists strike Denver, the Memphis. A deadly game of cat-and-mouse escalates to a breathtaking climax in this eerily prescient thriller.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 4, 1994
      Brown ( Chains of Command ) shamelessly promotes himself and his previous works in his eighth aeronautical techno-thriller. Thus, this unwieldy tale of domestic terrorism includes forces and characters (notably maverick Coast Guard Rear Admiral Ian Hardcastle) from prior books, as well as gratuitious self-references (``They had gotten that idea from a techno-thriller novel published a few years back . . . called Hammerheads ''; or, ``This is not some Dale Brown novel, this is real-life''). Supervillain Henri Cazaux, rich beyond measure from drug- and gun-running, has vowed revenge upon the U.S. government for abuse he suffered at the hands of Air Force security police when, as a youth, he was caught dealing hashish to American troops. He begins by bombing major civilian airports; the government, which must predict his next targets and outwit him, eventually has to employ military forces over the skies of our largest cities. Although Brown raises some provocative issues, such as the problem of interagency rivalries and the appropriateness of using military force in civilian areas, his political biases and heavy-handed sarcasm--especially in dealing with a certain gray-haired President who hails from the South and has ``a duplicitous and questionable private life,'' and with his First Lady, ``a tough-as-nails bitch''--blur the plot and will irritate readers who simply want to fly vicariously. Brown's aeronautical knowledge is broad and accurate, and his flight scenes are first-rate; it's too bad that he weighs them down with all that extra baggage.

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  • English

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