Thursday, March 9, 2023

Sgt. Dunn #17 title reveal and description

Hello Sgt. Dunn fans!

I'm delighted to reveal the title of the new book and the description. The book is in the hands of my FIRST READERS and I'm working on the edits and hope to release the book this month (March).

You can track my editing progress in the upper left of this blog!

Catch a Komet

Description

The Nazis and Japanese signed the Tripartite Pact along with Italy in the fall of 1940. Almost exactly four years later, The Japanese Minister of War, Hajime Sugiyama, signs a document whereby the Nazis agree to ship war materials by submarine to Japan including their Messerschmitt Me-163 Komet, the first rocket-powered fighter in the world.

Master Sergeant Tom Dunn, a U.S. Ranger, and his squad are tasked with destroying the submarine, which intelligence reports is being repaired at the submarine pens in Bergen, Norway. But first they must undergo rigorous scuba training.

Colonel Rupert Jenkins has a surprise in store for British Army Commando Sergeant Major Malcolm Saunders. Shortly after, Saunders is assigned to help the Free French SAS capture and protect bridges in the Netherlands, just hours in advance of the British Second Army’s big spring push eastward. Can Saunders and his men work with the French and accomplish their mission?

The Air Technical Intelligence (ATI) asks Colonel Kenton to “acquire” a German Me-163 Komet for study. He assigns the seemingly impossible job to Tom Dunn and they will have company: Major Norman Miller, who gained notoriety for stealing the Germans’ jet bomber in Operation Devil’s Fire. Who better to fly a rocket plane?

Can Dunn’s lethal squad take over a German airfield in the middle of the night and help Miller get the temperamental and volatile rocket plane into the air, and back to a British airfield?

Munsterman, a master of weaving facts and fiction into compelling suspenseful WWII action thrillers, creates yet another story based on WWII events. Catch a Komet shows readers how complex and seemingly impossible missions are conducted by those who excel at their jobs.