Here are some books that I would like to
recommend. If you see one you like, click on the book
and you can order directly from Amazon.com.
Seal Combat Boarding Manual:
U.S. Navy SEALs are the best in the world at secretly boarding, assaulting and securing
enemy-occupied ships and oil rigs. This exclusive manual outlines their techniques and
equipment for subsurface, surface and airborne ops. Packed with never-before-published
photos of frogmen, breachers, snipers and assault-team members ready for action.
Us Navy Seals in Action:
This book is very informative for the special forces/military lover or someone just
interested in how America's elite soldiers train and operate. US Navy SEALs in Action
shows the reader first hand how SEALs train and operate through amazing pictures and
captions. This book also gives information on the equipment used by SEALs and the
origin of the SEAL teams.
Rogue Warrior:
Here is the explosive autobiography of the brilliant, death-defying founder of the Navy's
top-secret counterterrorist unit: Seal Team Six. Following that success, he organized a
group of military terrorists to test the defenses of the Navy's facilities, only to
incur the wrath of the Navy brass. 8 pages of photographs.
Rogue Warrior Green Team:
The Rogue Warrior and his colleague are back in the third hard-boiled thriller derived from Marcinko's real career as a SEAL
who specialized in counterterrorist work. This one, more obviously fictional than Red
Cell [Mr 1 94], concerns the assassination of a U.S. chief of naval operations and
character Marcinko's pursuit of the assassins. His own government is on Marcinko's tail,
a deadly danger of germ warfare hangs over the whole world, and Marcinko can rely only
on his hard-bitten SEAL colleagues for help. They, of course, come through, filling
the memorably fast-paced yarn with vivid, hardware-laden detail. Marcinko is no more
concerned about being palatable to the socially sensitive than ever, so readers who
cannot tune out his soldier-of-fortunish asides must endure raised eyebrow fatigue,
but that does not gainsay the book's admirable readability for thriller fans.
Rogue Warrior Task Force Blue:
Once more, "Rogue Warrior" Marcinko and Weisman parlay the former's experiences into a
technothriller starring the former special operations soldier himself. This time,
Marcinko's target is a billionaire with presidential ambitions who is planning a wave
of terrorism to create demand for a dictator. Sent to investigate, Marcinko soon is on
the run from both the billionaire and constituted authority and has to call on his old
SEALs buddies to bring the enemy to ground. As usual for a Rogue Warrior yarn, this one
is a gripping hard-boiled thriller bulked up with information on weapons, hardware, and
the psychology of the warrior, all of which takes on the authority conferred by Marcinko's
personal experience. Task Force Blue may not win any new fans for the salty tongued
Marcinko, but it will please the dickens out of all the current ones.
Rogue Warrior Designation Gold:
An explosive political/military assassination by the Russian Mafia launches the Rogue
Warrior into war--as he penetrates the heart of a Moscow-based black-market network
dealing in international terrorism and mass murder. 10-city author tour.
Rogue Warrior Seal Force Alpha:
This fifth in a wildly successful series (Rogue Warrior: Designation Gold, p. 85, etc.) mixing brutal action and high-tech
toys doesn't stray far from the formula. Marcinko, himself a former Navy SEAL
(a career described in the nonfiction Rogue Warrior, 1992), once again celebrates the
adventures of a fictive Richard Marcinko and his lethal, rowdy band of SEALS as they
put paid to schemes aimed at destabilizing America. The villains here are the Red
Chinese, who have, with the collusion of a variety of defeatist and depraved members of
the Washington elite, hatched a bizarre scheme to greatly humble the nation. Marcinko
and his team handle, with gusto, both enemies without and traitors within, using their
wits, a staggering array of weapons, and an obvious appetite for violence. A slick,
streamlined, outrageous but entertaining product.
Rogue Warrior Red Cell:
How much of this sequel to the legendary and unorthodox SEALs leader's memoirs, Rogue
Warrior (1992), is fiction and how much novelized actual fact is likely to remain
forever in dispute, at least partly for security reasons. Marketed as a novel, this
story of how Marcinko and a handful of picked SEALs defeated a high-level plot to
smuggle nuclear weapons into the hands of Japanese rightists does, however, read just
like an excellent thriller of the hard-boiled, action-loaded variety. Also remember
that Marcinko, in spite of his maverick history and salty vocabulary, is an exceptionally
proficient special warfare leader. Fans of the first Rogue Warrior will lap this one up,
and general thriller aficionados may have fun with it, too.