Below us the Front


Book Description

Readers rejoin Franz Becker and Karl von Leussow in Below us the Front, the sequel to N L Collier’s debut novel, Home Before the Leaves Fall. Having survived the trenches on the Western Front, Franz has joined the Air Service and learns to fly in a fragile, unreliable machine. He passes his pilot’s course and is posted to a two-seater squadron in the east, where he is responsible for flying the slow, vulnerable biplane while his observer takes photographs, drops bombs, and defends them against Russian fighters with their only weapon – a single machine-gun. Fought on vast open plains, the war in the East is one of movement. Germany’s main ally is the tottering Austro-Hungarian Empire whose forces are unreliable and undermined by internal conflict. The Eastern Front would collapse without German support, as Franz and his comrades are only too aware. When the squadron is moved to the Western Front, they come face to face with skilful and determined opposition from French and English fighters, and the casualty rate mounts. Franz and his fellow pilots are keen to leave the lumbering two-seater aircraft for the agile and better-armed fighters, and to be the hunter instead of the hunted. At the same time Franz’s closest friend, Karl is fighting for his life in the blood-soaked earth of Verdun where his regiment is almost annihilated. He decides to follow Franz into the air – but first he has to stay alive.




Paths of Glory


Book Description

Reproduction of the original: Paths of Glory by Irvin S. Cobb













De Caelo


Book Description




Eco-terrorism Specifically Examining the Earth Liberation Front and the Animal Liberation Front


Book Description

The Code of Federal Regulations is a codification of the general and permanent rules published in the Federal Register by the Executive departments and agencies of the United States Federal Government.










Bravo Troop


Book Description

During the first half of 1969, Bravo Troop, 3rd Squadron, 4th Cavalry, 25th Infantry Division operated northwest of Saigon in the vicinity of Go Dau Ha, fighting in 15 actions on the Cambodian border, in the Boi Loi Woods, the Hobo Woods and Michelin Rubber Plantation and on the outskirts of Tay Ninh City. In that time, Bravo Troop saw 10 percent of its average field strength killed while inflicting much heavier losses on the enemy. This memoir vividly recounts those six months of intense armored cavalry combat in Vietnam through the eyes of an artillery forward observer, highlighting his fire direction techniques and the routines and frustrations of searching for the enemy and chaos of finding him.