Blog Posts by Uncle Will


takes a much needed Long Island vacation with his 10 adopted children and their nanny, Mary Catherine,
in tow. The springtime romance of Michael and Mary Catherine has blossomed into a summer fling. Just as
the 4th of July of all relationships is about to set off fireworks, a different set of fireworks explodein the city.
A copycat killer is reproducing some of NYC's most sinister past crimes. Bombs are booming. Bodies are
bouncing and it isn't even safe to sit and smooch in a parked car anymore, since Son of Sam Part II is playing at a parking lot near you!
While Michael juggles his vacation and his assignment as chief investigator of the mounting multiple homicides, a couple of local Long Island bullies are beating-up some of the Barrett boys on the beach.
Which lovely lady will Michael choose? Will the Barrett boys survive the beatings? Will the killer be captured
before completing his mission of death? Will Michael survive his daily round-trip drives on the Long Island
Expressway before both he and his vehicle come to a crashing halt?
Patterson once again has written the perfect murder mystery. As the title suggests, every thing comes down to the last stimulating second. Tick tock. Tick tock.
My father fought on Iwo Jima, a remote island in the Pacific West, from February 19 through March 16, 1945. 7000 Marines were killed and 20,000 were wounded, during the bloodiest battle of World War II. Unfortunately, most Americans today know more about the famously staged flag-raising incident that took place there, than the fact that on an island so small, so seemingly insignificant, so many men died fighting for world peace.
The Japanese had occupied Iwo Jima for so long that their entire occupying army was networked underground. After the Marine invasion it was discovered that all the Naval pre-invasion bombing did not even make a minuscule dent in disrupting the island defenses. The island consisted of black volcanic rock, finely ground, that made traversing difficult. The Japan forces knew that this island was integral to the defense of their homeland. They were extremely well-prepared. Suicide attacks were the nightly norm.
The chapter on Iwo Jima is just one of several examples of the sacrifices made and battles won.
There have been many books written about the war in the Pacific and this is one of the better ones; dedicated
exclusively to the final year of WWII and all the U.S. island victories that were lined-up like dominos. The
pictures are many and the writing is precise and easy to absorb. It does not read like a high school history book.





