Code of Terror
Book Two
Amazon Link to Code of Terror:
It’s
September, 1942. The United States is at war in Europe and in the Pacific. The
people in the small town of Brookings, Oregon are terrified. Former Naval
Academy student, Gaston Carson, has been assigned to serve as Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s
personal eyes and ears in the Pacific Northwest, on the job only ten months,
and is in the middle of the chaos. Strange balloons are being sighted.
Unexplained forest fires are springing up, a school has been bombed and a
mysterious airplane, said to be Japanese has been sighted.
Three months
earlier Japanese Americans were ordered to inland internment camps. Most went
peacefully, but some pledged allegiance to the Imperial Government of Japan.
A Japanese Underground movement has
caused the FBI to launch the largest manhunt ever to be conducted in Oregon
history.
The stakes
are raised when Gaston takes a mysterious phone call and later finds the caller
is dead. To make matters worse his girlfriend has been taken hostage. In a
frantic period of terror along the Oregon Coast, Gaston risks his life to
protect innocent civilians from a ruthless sheriff, a corrupt Civil Defense
leader, and a Japanese sympathizer who will kill anyone in his path.
During World
War 2 there were many atrocities, among them the treatment of the Jews by the
Nazis, the treatment of the Allies taken prisoner by the Japanese and the
internment of American citizens of Japanese descent by the Americans.
The
internment order was debated at the time and was most certainly unconstitutional.
Many Japanese Americans went peacefully into the camps, giving up their homes,
businesses and possessions. Some argue that the very act of imprisonment
created animosity resulting in home-front terrorists. Code of Terror is a novel set in
the Pacific Northwest during the early years of the war, the very time the fear
of the people led to the incarceration of our Japanese American citizens. The
book is the sequel to Code of Silence and the second book in a three part
series.
If you
haven’t read book one, Code of Silence, I recommend it as a first read,
although Code of Terror can be read as a standalone novel you will get to know
the characters better and the setting more personally by starting with book
one. This link will take you to the Amazon page for Code of Silence. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B018D12XWA
woaa...i never seen such book...such an great book...
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