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Arctic Wings (Stories from the Golden Age)

by L. Ron Hubbard

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822,160,896 (4.63)None
A charming rogue cut from the same cloth as Robert Mitchum, American engineer Dan Courtney is learning fast that it takes more than a little charm to lay the groundwork for a railroad. Particularly when the plan is to build it across some of the roughest and most dangerous territory on earth. Courtney's been hired to survey the land that would link up the Uganda Railway to the Anglo-Egyptian railroad. Running through desert, jungle and mountains, this is one line--and story--with more twists and turns than the New York City subway system. Diamond smugglers. A fearsome native tribe. A beautiful young American woman . . . and a man determined to kill her. Put them all together and you've got a world where All Frontiers Are Jealous. It's up to Courtney to tame those frontiers--take on the tribe, save the woman, and save the future of the railroad . . . before his blood ends up on the tracks. L. Ron Hubbard based this story on the real-life history of the countless harrowing attempts in the late 19th and early 20th century to link up the two railroads. An experienced civil engineer and surveyor himself, Hubbard had worked in rough and dangerous terrain as part of the West Indies Mineralogical Expedition. All Frontiers Are Jealous may be a work of fiction, but as far as Hubbard was concerned, in his own life, the adventure couldn't have been more real. "Terrific from beginning to end." --Midwest Book Review… (more)
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Really liked this one! Part morality play and part psychology, we have one Bob "Lawbook" Dixon, who considers he's tough. He catches a man and beats him nearly to death, and when he tries to run, Bob shoots him, maiming him for life! But "he's a criminal, and criminals are all rats!". The woman he tells this to says "My dad was a criminal, is he a rat?"

So much for having a code to live by that is so strict, allows for no flexibility. It gets so bad that he gets fired from the Mounted Police for cruelty.

Later, he gets framed for a crime he did not commit. On the run, he moves to prove his innocence, and falls in love at the same time!

The dogfight scenes with the planes in the air, mixed with bravery and a machine gun or two, make for some exciting page-turner fiction.

Recommended.
  James_Mourgos | Dec 22, 2016 |
A topnotch adventure tale with plenty of action and suspense, and a dash of romance too! Highly enjoyable. I also recommend the audio book version! ( )
  TPMCNULTY | Mar 13, 2014 |
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A charming rogue cut from the same cloth as Robert Mitchum, American engineer Dan Courtney is learning fast that it takes more than a little charm to lay the groundwork for a railroad. Particularly when the plan is to build it across some of the roughest and most dangerous territory on earth. Courtney's been hired to survey the land that would link up the Uganda Railway to the Anglo-Egyptian railroad. Running through desert, jungle and mountains, this is one line--and story--with more twists and turns than the New York City subway system. Diamond smugglers. A fearsome native tribe. A beautiful young American woman . . . and a man determined to kill her. Put them all together and you've got a world where All Frontiers Are Jealous. It's up to Courtney to tame those frontiers--take on the tribe, save the woman, and save the future of the railroad . . . before his blood ends up on the tracks. L. Ron Hubbard based this story on the real-life history of the countless harrowing attempts in the late 19th and early 20th century to link up the two railroads. An experienced civil engineer and surveyor himself, Hubbard had worked in rough and dangerous terrain as part of the West Indies Mineralogical Expedition. All Frontiers Are Jealous may be a work of fiction, but as far as Hubbard was concerned, in his own life, the adventure couldn't have been more real. "Terrific from beginning to end." --Midwest Book Review

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