For Glory, For Victory, For Love of Country In a time of savage conflict and global chaos, a new breed of fighting men answers their nation's call with pride and courage -- the Navy's Underwater... This description may be from another edition of this product.
As a reader with an interest in the Navy SEALS,I have read (and own)this title and each subsequent book. Although I am in no way a historian, I think this book does a good job describing the early beginnings of the SEALS and is a good read if you are into this sort of subject. Personally, I have enjoyed all of this author's books on the subject and as this is the first book in the series it's a good place to start. It reads a little diffrently from Demo Dick Marcinko's Rouge Warrior books, so don't expect the same thing. As noted above, 5 Stars to Mr. Riker!
A Great Read
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 23 years ago
I'm connected to the military and find little time to read. A friend loaned me Book One in the warrior Breed series "Silver Star" and I suddenly found time. The most memorable moment was when Tangretti takes the first obstacle at Normandy...ever see the movie "Saving Private Ryan"? Same scenario..I had this "ah-hah; it must be real" when Tangretti says "Sir, you need to move. I have orders to blow this obstacle." If you know any true SEALs that haven't already read the series and love it; it makes a gift he'll thank you for with every new book. Let's hope it becomes a movie!!
Great Book to start an excellent Series.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
H. Jay Riker starts of his SEALs series with a great book about the start of the legendary program. This book draws you in, and grabs you. The end is so shocking and suspenseful, that I was almost in tears after I put it down! Read this book, it is great.
Is H. Jay Rider really W.E.B Griffin?
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 26 years ago
After completing Silver Star, I am convinced (Well, Sort of...) that Mr. Riker is really WEB Griffin. My reasons, some strong and some weak, are as follows: 1. Mr. Griffin has written under Psuedonyms before, IE: Badge of Honor, and the books under the Alex Baldwin name.2. Charlie Galloway is a character in a Griffin book, and Joseph Galloway is a character in Silver Star. Coincidence?3. The book feels similar to Griffins other works. It's seems nebulous, but if you've read Griffins books you would know what I mean. The mix of fictional/non-fictional characters, the rich kid whose a troublemaker but finds his place, the guy with the tough as nails Father who a character has conflicts with.I know it's not much but there are a hundred other coincidences, names, places, sentence structure, the fact that Mr. Riker hasn't written much else(Anything at all) and that, at least in Silver Star, there is no Author biography. It's also a mass market paper back (the dump bin), so it recieved no press etc. I wonder........Jeff Newman jbn4@yahoo.com
This book shows the first generation of SEALs with the first NCDU and UDT in WWII. It's a book about camaraderie, spirit, and bravery of the men who fought and sometimes died in units that typically sustained 50-90% casualties on missions. It is incredibly well-written and shows the true face of war and what these men faced. A lot of people see war as being glory and honor and courage and everything goes as planned. It never is. The men who are most affected are right here in this novel. Pick it up and read it unless you can't handle the truth
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