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Friday, June 19, 2026

Post Library

Since I’ve retired I have had a lot of time on my hands. I had never been much of a reader, in fact one of the things I really disliked about high school was having to write the dreaded book report!

Although I clearly remember a book I checked out of the Tuy Hot AFB library in 1968 when I was 21 years old.  The title was Ploiesti, a story of the 1943 Allied attack on the Romanian oil fields and Nazi refineries during World War II.  I read it when I was on TDY to Saigon to learn about our photo labs new ES-38B processing labs we had just received at Phabulous Phu Hiep By The Sea.  I simply could not set this book down until I finished it.  I don’t know if this particular book is still in print, but there are others that tell this story of the low level Allied raid that is well worth reading.


Since our kids were little and I read them their bedtime stories like Richard Scarry’s Best Word Book Ever and Cars and Trucks and Things That Go (reading to them was something my wife Karin encouraged me to do) I enjoyed reading to them just for the pleasure it.  And in the past ten or fifteen years I have begun to read more and more.

When I was working at Seattle Children’s Hospital a colleague gave me an adventure novel by Clive Cussler and I was hooked!  In case you’re not aware who Cussler is, his Wikipedia bio states that he “was an American adventure novelist and underwater explorer.” He founded the National Undersea and Marine Agency (NUMA) “which has discovered more than 60 shipwreck sites and numerous other notable underwater wrecks.”  


I was given a Kindle several years ago, so my access to books has broadened considerably.  I have read I don’t know how many Cussler novels plus a lot of World War II historical stories that are really well written.  The great thing about the Kindle is that many of the books are in series of up to five or more volumes that include the same characters but broaden out the original plot and often refer back to the original ones.


I’ve just finished a series entitled Sunlit Silence by Frank A. Mason (the first book in the series is Sunward I’ve Climbed) about a young man in Georgia from a family whose matriarch is a member of the DAR (Daughters the America Revolution), who really wants her son Robert Harney “Trip” Gibson III to attend Georgia Tech.  But his love of flying is so strong (he actually owns a JN-4 Jenny) that he clandestinely goes to Spain in 1938 to fly in the Spanish civil war, and subsequently ends up flying for the French and the British against the Nazis and then for his own country in World War II.  

Mason’s books and many others that I’ve read are filled with history from which I have learned about events that were new to me.  For instance, I’ve seen news reels about the CG-3 Waco gliders that were towed behind C-47s, particularly during the D-Day invasion of Normandy over eight decades ago.  Mason spends a fair amount of time describing how these gliders from different Allied assaults were actually retrieved using the Model 80C Pickup System.  It’s a fascinating process; take a look at this amazing operation at this article (complete with photos) from the National WWII Glider Pilots Association.  


Another series I am just finishing up is After Dunkirk by Lee Jackson.  This wonderful series follows a family from the island of Sark in the Channel Islands whose mother of the Littlefield family is the head (Dame of Sark) of the local government. Her family’s circumstances are followed throughout the series as World War II progresses.  When I began this series I had never heard of Sark and had to look it up and I discovered that the Channel Islands the only European location where Nazi Germany actually occupied British territory.

Anyway, that’s all from the “Post Library” for today.  Please let me know what books you have read or are reading because I know that you like me have some time on your hands nowadays.

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