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Up Country (Paul Brenner #2) Paperback | Pages: 880 pages
Rating: 4.02 | 16684 Users | 814 Reviews

Identify Of Books Up Country (Paul Brenner #2)

Title:Up Country (Paul Brenner #2)
Author:Nelson DeMille
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:First Edition
Pages:Pages: 880 pages
Published:April 1st 2003 by Vision (first published January 29th 2002)
Categories:Fiction. Thriller. Mystery

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The last thing Paul Brenner wanted to do was return to work for the Army's Criminal Investigative Division, an organization that thanked him for his many years of dedicated service by forcing him into early retirement. But when his former boss calls in a career's worth of favors, Paul finds himself investigating a murder that took place back in Vietnam thirty years before. Now, returning to a time and place that still haunts him, Paul is swept up in the battle of his life as he struggles to find justice.

Itemize Books During Up Country (Paul Brenner #2)

Original Title: Up Country
ISBN: 0446611913 (ISBN13: 9780446611916)
Edition Language: English
Series: Paul Brenner #2

Rating Of Books Up Country (Paul Brenner #2)
Ratings: 4.02 From 16684 Users | 814 Reviews

Crit Of Books Up Country (Paul Brenner #2)
Not quite a terrible book but certainly not very good. I'm not even sure why I bothered to finish it, other than the fact that I read it while on vacation in Vietnam. To begin with, hardly anything happened in the first 300 pages, other than Brenner's girlfriend smoking a lot. Why did he have to describe her everytime she lit up? At least he didn't bother us with descriptions of her trips to bathroom.Secondly, there seemed to be some big gaps in logic. I'm still not sure why they hired the

This is the first book by this author that I've read and I still rate it as his best. I've read a few more since but none of them match it. When your knowledge of the Vietnam conflict is restricted to a couple of movies, then this book provides a little insight into it and at the same time weaving a great story as well? Trying to investigate a murder in a country where the American people are still considered the enemy only heightens the suspense and thriller aspects.

Not bad but could have been a lot better. Usual DeMille quality in atmosphere and dialogue. But--it takes a long time for anything to happen. Basically the first third of the book could have been cut drastically. Another problem I had was with the obnoxiousness of the main character. I realize that Brenner showed up in a previous book, which I have not read, but he is also very similar to the main character in the Gold Coast and Plum Island. That is, the typical DeMille main character is a tough

Excellent novel and narration. Rich in history of the Vietnam War. Looking forward to more by this author. Caution, there is profanity and descriptive sex scenes.

Nelson DeMille is a brilliant storyteller. Though this brick of a book was over 700 pages, I couldn't put it down, for the sheer suspense of it all. I've met Vietnam Veterans and heard some stories when I was a teen. It was a horrible war, senseless to a lot of Americans and with age comes knowledge and wisdom. The shocking knowledge that anyone is capable of 'madness' follows the wisdom to understand the emotional stress of that type of war. DeMille has described his views and personal

"This place has colored my life, and changed the course of my personal history, not once, or twice, but three times now. I should ask myself what kept drawing me back." Things I have known Vietnam and its War - Universal Soldier, First Blood, Koko and some random wikipedia articles."Munitions is one thing we never ran out of. We ran out of will."The book brings out a different perspective about war and the veterans. Specifically, how the veterans feel about the war! I think you can read this

Oh my goodness... I stayed up until wee hours and ploughed through the rest of this book all day. Truly love DeMille's character Paul Brenner (more even than John Corey) and I loved Up Country more than the book introducing Brenner, The General's Daughter. Reading this made me stop and reflect about the VietNam war, and got me thinking despite my husband serving in this godforsaken hostilities I felt grateful he was there before 1968; in the signal corp rather than as a infantryman as DeMille