Product Details
18 Hours: The True Story of an SAS War Hero

18 Hours: The True Story of an SAS War Hero
By Sandra Lee

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #64599 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-04-30
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 288 pages

Editorial Reviews

Synopsis
SAS signalman Jock Wallace was pumped. It was the start of Operation Anaconda, the US-led military offensive designed to flush out and destroy Al-Qaeda and the Taliban from their last stronghold in the notorious Shai Kot valley in Afghanistan. Jock was riding into battle alongside 80 troops of the US Army's 10th Mountain Division. If intelligence reports were correct, there were between 100 and 250 enemy fighters holed up in the extensive cave network buried in the mountain ridges around the valley. But reports can be wrong. Minutes after the combat-ready troops stormed down the rear ramps of the Chinook helicopters, Jock's company came under heavy fire from the high ground overlooking their position in a dry riverbed. Pinned down by nearly 1000 enemy fighters in what was later nicknamed Hell's Halfpipe, Jock and his American comrades stared eventual death in the face. Eighteen relentless hours of hell were just beginning. With machine-gun bullets kicking up the dust and rock around their feet, mortars and rocket-propelled grenades bursting among them, and with a quarter of the troops sustaining injuries, it seemed that the soldiers had been cut off and trapped. But there was no way Jock was going down without a fight. Nor were the men he was with. Holding off the enemy at close range, rescuing the injured, dodging the bullets, counterattacking alone, reporting to base, calling up air support - Jock gave all that he had, and more. And as dusk and the enemy began to close in, he was determined he was not going to die on foreign soil, not at the hands of al Qaeda...This is the gripping true story of how an elite SAS soldier fought the fight of his life against the world's deadliest terrorists in the most dangerous corner on earth and came out victorious, a saviour to his fellow troops and a decorated hero in his homeland. It is the clearest account yet of one of the fiercest engagements in the history of the special forces war on terror.


Customer Reviews

A great story poorly written1
having read aminstream american account's from the american perpective i was lookingforward to this book.

However I was truly dissapointed. The writing style is erratic and jumpy moving backwards and forwards through the original story and ancillary event's of people around it.

Suffice to say i found the first few chapters throughly hard work and gave up in the end.

'Full of fun and adventure'?!1
Disgusting review, saying that this shoddy little book is 'full of fun & adventure'. The reviewer will be telling us next how he gave hell to the fuzzy-wuzzies. We should be very ashamed of this glorification of war. If a German writer had published this in the late 1930s or early 1940s, we would say that it proved how vile Nazism was. Try and see how others see us.

Disappointing 2
The subject matter had such promise and I had hoped that this was going to be an interesting read. As my fellow reviewers have (mostly) already said, the writing style really lets this book down.

After reading books like Black Hawk Down, I expected that a journalist would be able to write an engrossing story about an epic battle. Unfortunately I was left feeling very let down by Sandra Lee's account. It was a struggle to read, just because of the author's rather flat style. It didn't help the flow of the narrative that in the midst of the battle the author decided to throw in a few chapters about Wallace's history and background on the Regiment.

In conclusion, and echoing other reviewer's opinions, not worth the price.