Praise for Martin LimÃģn:
âItâs great to have these two mavericks back. . . . Mr. LimÃģn writes with . . . wonderful, bleak humor, edged in pain, about GI life.ââThe New York Times Book Review
âLimÃģnâs crisp, clear storytelling opens a door to another world and leaves one hoping the next installment wonât be so long in arriving.ââThe Baltimore Sun
âLimÃģn has the military lingo and ambience down to a T. Plot, pacing, and plausibility are just about perfect.ââThe Philadelphia Inquirer (editorâs choice)
âAs usual, LimÃģn paints a picture of Korea in the mid-1970s that is so detailed and richly atmospheric that the readerâs senses are flooded with the sounds, smells, and tastes of the place. Fans of the SueÃąo-Bascom series, who have been waiting eagerly for a new novel, can relax. It was well worth the wait.ââBooklist (starred review)
The only female MP assigned to a base in the DMZ is missing. Has she been abducted, killed, or, possibly, gone AWOL? Eighth Army cops George SueÃąo and Ernie Bascom, sent to find her, discover a murder that has been concealed, rampant black marketeering and corruption, crooked officers, rioting Korean civilians, and the wandering ghost of a schoolgirl run down by a speeding army truck. It is up to them to right egregious wrongs while being pursued by criminals who want to kill them.
Martin LimÃģn is the author of four earlier books in the SueÃąo-Bascom series. His debut, Jade Lady Burning, was a New York Times Notable Book.
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