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The Last Klick by Robert Flynn now available for Kindle
Originally published in 1994, JoSara MeDia brings back this highly praised, classic novel of Vietnam by Robert Flynn. Now available in Kindle format. For more details on the novel, click here. Kindle provides a download of a free sample on their site. Read more…
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New Kindle editions available
(January 11, 2010) – Software by the Kilo, the latest novel from Larry Ketchersid, has just been released for the Amazon Kindle and is available for purchase. Dusk Before the Dawn, Ketchersid’s first novel, is now available for Kindle, Nook and other formats. This book was a Finalist for the ForeWord Magazine Book of the Year awards in 2006. Also, look for The Last Klick by Robert Flynn to be available in Kindle format soon. Originally published in 1994, this is the story of war correspondent Sherrill O’Connell, who heads to Vietnam to escape the death of his daughter. What he finds there is a world of unreality, distorted by the new media. Because of an instinctive reaction to sudden danger, he becomes a hero. His own story becomes the good news that Americans want to hear. Read more…
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coming soon (eBook): The Last Klick by Robert Flynn
Originally published in 1994, The Last Klick by Robert Flynn will soon be available in eBook format. Here’s what Saul Bellow and 60 Minutes Steve Kroft had to say about Bob’s novel: I’ve read many books about the Great War and about Stalingrad and the other horrors of World War Two, but THE LAST KLICK, because it comes out of a contemporary sensibility, presents a greater challenge to the feelings. The madness of jungle warfare is matched moreover by the wicked idiocy of press and television. The United States seen from Vietnam is even more distorting than the experiences of combat. Written with passion and great skill — SAUL BELLOW Twenty odd years ago, I had the pleasure of spending a few days traveling around Vietnam with Robert Flynn who was then a freelance correspondent for True Magazine. Now, after finishing THE LAST KLICK, I know what he was really up to. He has done a wonderful job of recreating the sights and sounds and smells fo Vietnam, and he has captured the ambitions, pretensions and cynicism of the international press corps that covered the war. Read more…