The Last Mission of the Seventh Cavalry

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Pub Date 25 Mar 2013 | Archive Date 27 Apr 2019

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Description

A unit of the Seventh Cavalry is on a mission over Afghanistan when their plane is hit by something. The soldiers bail out of the crippled plane, but when the thirteen men and women reach the ground, they are not in Afghanistan.

Not only are they four thousand miles from their original destination but it appears they have descended two thousand years into the past where primitive forces fight each other with swords and arrows.

The platoon is thrown into a battle where they must choose sides quickly or die. They are swept along in a tide of events so powerful that their courage, ingenuity and weapons are tested to the limits of their durability and strength.

A unit of the Seventh Cavalry is on a mission over Afghanistan when their plane is hit by something. The soldiers bail out of the crippled plane, but when the thirteen men and women reach the ground...


Available Editions

EDITION Ebook
ISBN 9781482055535
PRICE US$0.00 (USD)

Average rating from 2 members


Featured Reviews

An interesting idea - during a reversal of the earth's magnetic poles there is also a time flip catapulting 21stC American military into the Carthaginian-Roman embattled past of 218BC. Our Americans, aptly from the Seventh Cavalry, adjust remarkably rapidly to their new surroundings amongst a lot of archetypal 'squaddie' macho behaviour and backchat. Happily their Native American colleague can sign and the local girls can understand what she is saying! They can communicate. Sign language is probably far more likely to be a success in this type of scenario than the convenient Oxford Latin scholar Lieutenant in a similar time travelling story I recently read - Pax Britannica. She happily chatted to the Romans in Latin. The locals were essentially Hannibal and his troops, supporters, camp followers as well as inordinate numbers of goats, cattle, horses and, of course, his elephants.. All were heading to the great battles with the Romans at this time. There were a lot, really a lot, of battle scenes with our intrepid 21st century troops using their drone, conveniently solar powered, to help Hannibal, not to mention their - guns. The author clearly knows that part of history and that's why I gave it 4 stars. I reckon the audience would be young adults, probably (not pc but there you are) mostly young men who will avidly read the battle bits and hopefully pick up some useful history too. I liked the descriptions of the vast array of support needed to move an army of this size, the logistics of feeding everyone, their effect on locals and landscape alike although I did NOT LIKE THEIR USE OF POTATOES!!!! Thanks to NetGalley and BookGoSocial for an honest review in exchange for their providing me with a free electronic copy of this book.

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