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Code of Honor
 
 

Code of Honor (Hardcover)

by Harold Coyle (Author) "LOOKING DOWN AT HER WATCH, CAPTAIN NANCY KOZAK Decided that it would probably be a good idea to go over and check with her battalion..." (more)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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From Publishers Weekly

In the near future of Coyle's latest techno-thriller, the U.S. has dispatched its (fictional) 11th Air Assault Division to aid Colombia's unstable government in suppressing a Marxist insurgency and, while it's there, to try and damage the region's booming drug trade as well. By the time Brigadier-General Scott Dixon, familiar to readers of The Ten Thousand and Bright Star , arrives to evaluate the mission one year later, he finds the insurgency growing ever more formidable and the 11th Air crippled by the incompetence of its commander, Major General Charles Lane. The crisis peaks when infantry Captain Nancy Kozak overrides Lane's micromanagement of a firefight and insults him over the radio. Lane demands that she face a court-martial; Dixon is caught between allegiance to the truth and the need to support the chain of command. Coyle's cold-eyed portrayal of an American battalion demoralized by repeated ambushes offers a welcome corrective to post-Desert Storm triumphalism, but his storyline essentially recycles Vietnam War issues and avoids such end-of-the-century concerns as the use of U.S. forces in peacekeeping and nation-building.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Library Journal

In best-selling author Coyle's latest military thriller, U.S. troops are sent to quell civil war in Colombia, where Capt. Nancy Kozak gets court-martialed.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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LOOKING DOWN AT HER WATCH, CAPTAIN NANCY KOZAK Decided that it would probably be a good idea to go over and check with her battalion commander. Read the first page
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5 Reviews
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4.0 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Almost perfect, Aug 16 2001
Just two minor quibbles, the first being the slightly cartoonish Lane character who was predictable and stereotyped every step of the way despite some attempt to flesh him out, second being a hurried ending that closed the court martial with a footnote rather than the big bang that it was building up towards.

However, these are small issues. Coyle's take on the Colombian drug war is arguably superior to its equivalents in Tom Clancy's overplotted Clear and Present Danger and Ralph Peters' Twilight of Heroes. Other than Lane, all other characters are well-realised and the gripping narrative is tinged with an affecting touch of sadness. Emotions practically exploded off the pages after the tragic fiasco in the jungle.

I regard this novel as one of the best post-Cold War technothrillers, if it can be called that. Although the genre effectively lay down and died due to the paucity of credible sparring opponents for the might of the US, Code Of Honour shines like a rare gem in the overall decline. Highly recommended.

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3.0 out of 5 stars There seems more to the story, Aug 12 2001
Code of Honor is a cautionary book on sending American troops to other countries without a clear objective. Not too different from Vietnam. I think Coyle romanticizes rebel life a little too much. This romanticism is shown from the eyes of a former teacher-now-turned FARC rebel. The book could have been more objective in that the rebels are nowhere morally better than the government. They'd actually be into kidnap, and extortion.

After the previous book, The Ten Thousand, the tension between mainstays Dixon and Jan Fields is much less. And not much is explored with Capt. Nancy Kozak and her beau. I shall miss one of the familiar characters in the series. The story feels lacking and it could be due to limiting the story to about 500+ pages.

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4.0 out of 5 stars excellent book; you will be angry, sad and happy, Jan 28 1999
By rotckid@yahoo.com (Warrenton, Virginia, U.S.A.) - See all my reviews
it's a book that will leave you frustrated and yet somehow elated at the results. Two U.S. Army Generals face off behind the scenes of a ficticous quagmire war based in Columbia, with the lives and careers of Army officers at stake.
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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars It was OK, I guess.
Code of Honor wasn't too bad. It had some action, but mostly it centered around a U.S. General named C.B. Read more
Published on May 18 1997

4.0 out of 5 stars Chairborne Commandos sink Warriors-Again
This was the most disturbing of the Coyle novels tracing the path of the modern military through the major characters. Read more
Published on Mar 23 1997

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