Photo de l'auteur

Chuck Pfarrer

Auteur de SEAL Target Geronimo

24+ oeuvres 800 utilisateurs 19 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Chuck Pfarrer, a former SEAL, has had unprecedented access to the men who went on the operation, and in SEAL Target Geronimo he shares never-before-revealed details of the mission in a thrilling, minute-by minute account. In doing so he takes the reader straight to the heart of the Al Qaeda afficher plus mastermind's lair, describing vividly his last moments, and telling the truth about what really happened in the shabby, litter-strewn compound where justice finally caught up with the worlds most wanted man. afficher moins
Crédit image: Belle News

Œuvres de Chuck Pfarrer

SEAL Target Geronimo (2011) 241 exemplaires
The Jackal [1997 film] (1997) — Screenwriter — 148 exemplaires
Virus [1999 film] (1999) — Writer — 64 exemplaires
Darkman [1990 film] (1990) — Writer — 62 exemplaires
Killing Che: A Novel (2007) 52 exemplaires
Virus (1995) 15 exemplaires
Red Planet (2003) 5 exemplaires
The Thing From Another World #1 (1991) 4 exemplaires
The Thing From Another World #2 (1991) 4 exemplaires
Virus #4 (1993) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Navy Seals (1990) — Writer — 45 exemplaires
Barb Wire [1996 Film] (1996) — Screenplay — 32 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Autres noms
Charles Patrick Pfarrer III
Date de naissance
1957-04-13
Sexe
male
Nationalité
USA
Lieu de naissance
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Professions
screenwriter
Organisations
United States Navy

Membres

Critiques

Science Fiction
 
Signalé
BooksInMirror | 1 autre critique | Feb 19, 2024 |
This is a real good look at the life and experiences of a Navy SEAL. This shows how these are guys who are somehow extraordinary while still being normal human beings with all the problems that the rest of us have. They just have something inside that makes them just keep going when the rest of us would quit. In my opinion, this is a good introduction to SEALs for thosse who wonder about them. It is very well written, accessible and fast paced.
 
Signalé
Luziadovalongo | 4 autres critiques | Jul 14, 2022 |
This is a well-balanced view of the last days Che Guevara. This fictional story is well-written and compelling. The main character, Paul Hoyle weaves through historical figures as the action does not stop. Characters are well written and I cared about what happened to them. It's a big book, but I could not stop listening.

After I finished the book I researched what was true and what was not. Reality was sadder. Strangely, Chuck's fictional book helped me understand the politics and the background of what was factual.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
nab6215 | 2 autres critiques | Jan 18, 2022 |
This is a well written book by a raised Catholic man who lost his faith during Hurricane Camille when his family lost their home and he abandoned his faith in Christianity. He regained his faith in a supreme being when while stationed in Beirut, Lebanon he was hit by a mortar round but went unscathed although the munition went off within feet of him.
The best part of the book for me was his version of events during the Marine barracks bombing. Pfarrer was working there with his SEAL team in a hopeless “peacekeeping” situation. He doesn’t blame Reagan but it was Reagan who was President then. From all other accounts Marine brass also were asleep at the wheel. He mentions only Marine Commandant P.X. Kelly as being negligent as anybody else. Pfarrer laments that this Hezbollah attack should never have been allowed to have happened in the first place. 241 US personnel died tragically that day.
Pfarrer also documents his time capturing the Achille Lauro terrorists who were green lit by the PLO. This is also covered in the Gormly memoir Combat Swimmer: Memoirs of a Navy Seal. Pfarrer went on to become a screenwriter and so this book has craftsmanship to it. Warrior Soul also has power as a poetic vehicle when he describes his use of submarine lockout trunks and swimming alone next to a mechanical wonder like a US submarine.
While in training cycles Pfarrer says that it is now official Navy doctrine that during the Vietnam War the NVA were actually trying to eliminate the VC by absurd operations (i.e. Tet Offensive). These insane operations were known to the US at the time of the war but has always been assumed by other books that I’ve read as being the doctrine of the NVA and VC in collaboration. Pfaffer says that among special operations’ core understandings the VC effort was always futile, and the VC were always sacrificed to the whims of the supply chains and massing of the NVA troops. This was a new thing I read here and nowhere else. The reason this would be true, Pfarrer says, was that communist doctrine demands that all power and decision making happen at the party level and not among military strategists.
This book has minimal gung-ho bravado which adds to its literary credibility, in my eyes.
B&W Photos, Glossary, three chapters, intended for military acquainted readers but most names & some places have been changed to protect the innocent.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
sacredheart25 | 4 autres critiques | Mar 6, 2020 |

Prix et récompenses

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Statistiques

Œuvres
24
Aussi par
2
Membres
800
Popularité
#31,872
Évaluation
½ 3.4
Critiques
19
ISBN
50
Langues
1

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