
One adventure after another after another. Whew! Definitely action. That was just like Indiana Jones with no time for popcorn or restroom breaks. --747 Captain Dave Glasebrook.It rates right up there with Wager with the Wind. Fantastic book and very well written. --Dave Linde, pilotThe story holds your interest throughout with no lulls or flat spots. A good mix of humor, funny situations, trials, tribulations and justice. --David Schuck, pilot, outdoorsman, and editorThe best book I've read since high school. I couldn't put it down! --Gary Conner, Pleasant Land BooksMike Kincaid has created a masterpiece of adventure, suspense, intrigue, and humor. HIs writing style reflects the warmth and dedicatiion to his fellow officers and his work...A must read book. You will enjoy it from its exciting beginning to its surprising ending. --Sandra E. Graham, Author of Amos Jakey and NicolinaThe best book I've read since high school. I couldn't put it down! --Gary Conner, Pleasant Land BooksMike Kincaid has created a masterpiece of adventure, suspense, intrigue, and humor. HIs writing style reflects the warmth and dedicatiion to his fellow officers and his work...A must read book. You will enjoy it from its exciting beginning to its surprising ending. --Sandra E. Graham, Author of Amos Jakey and NicolinaAbout the AuthorM.D. Kincaid survived a rewarding, and exciting, career with the Alaska Department of Public Safety. He has lived in McKinley Park, Talkeetna, Valdez, Glennallen Fairbanks, Bethel, King Salmon, Girdwood and Palmer, where he hiked, fished, hunted, skied, snowshoed, mushed dogs, flew Bush planes, chased bad guys, and built log cabins deep in the woods. He now shares his passion for seaplane flying with students from around the globe in his restored Piper J3 and writes when the weather grounds him. how big would wikipedia be if it was a book Alaska Justice
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Don't know who survivesBy Southwest WomanTerrible shock halfway through. Kincaid kills off a character halfway through the book, then picks the character's story line as if nothing happened. I don't like that ploy. I'm irritated and upset. I may not finish the book.I lived in Alaska nearly 20 years and recognize people and places. I don't fly so all the flying and plane jargon went over my head. It's not integral to the plot as far as I can tell.I was wrong, the character wasn't killed. But it was bad for the plot. Cheap trick.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. If you like Alaska you'll like this bookBy Russell OrangeThis book combines police work and airplanes adding to the Alaskan excitement. It is sometimes a bit slow however I found it to be an enjoyable read. Each time a type of airplane was mentioned I looked at Google images for a better understanding of the plane. Same for the cities and towns, unless I am already familiar with them I looked them up to see their location. This helped to put me into the story-line and action of the book. To the question did I like it? I liked it enough that upon completion I downloaded the next book in the series.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Interesting Stories, but...By Lee DunningThe stories in this book are very exciting and interesting, however the actual writing is stiff and basic. The author would benefit from a writing class, especially one where he had to read his work out loud. Things like dialogue where almost every sentence ends with the name/title of the person being addressed would get caught, and made to sound more natural, and less like an old episode of Dragnet. Also, the book would greatly benefit from a professional formatting job. As it is, a great many paragraphs start on the same line as the previous paragraph but with a large space between the sentences. Strange boxes show up in these areas too. A nicely formatted layout would do wonders for the overall appearance and add much to the reading experience.