Neil Russell's Blog - Posts Tagged "neil-russell"
BEVERLY HILLS IS BURNING
A little over a month ago the third Rail Black novel, Beverly Hills is Burning, was released. You can purchase it here for your Kindle (http://amzn.to/1hUOwFa) or here in trade paperback (http://amzn.to/Q849l3). After you have read the book, I would greatly appreciate it if you left an Amazon review. Thanks for continuing to be a part of Rail Black's entourage. -NR
Published on April 24, 2014 18:58
•
Tags:
beverly-hills-is-burning, neil-russell, rail-black
International Thriller Writers Roundtable
I will be participating in the International Thriller Writers Roundtable, from April 28-May 4. Click on the link below to join in and follow. - NR
http://www.thebigthrill.org/thriller-...
http://www.thebigthrill.org/thriller-...
Published on April 25, 2014 13:06
•
Tags:
itw, neil-russell, the-big-thrill
Interview with Book Reader Magazine
Here is an interview that I recently did with Book Reader Magazine. Had a lot of fun.
http://bookreadermagazine.com/feature...
http://bookreadermagazine.com/feature...
Published on May 30, 2014 14:36
•
Tags:
interview, neil-russell, press, rail-black
Reviews
Published on June 10, 2014 14:06
•
Tags:
amazon, neil-russell, rail-black, reviews
Spotlight on 4covert2overt
Special thanks to fellow Book Blogger M.C.V. Egan for featuring myself and BEVERLY HILLS IS BURNING in a spotlight on her blog, 4covert2overt: http://4covert2overt.blogspot.com/201...
Follow her on Twitter, @M_C_V_Egan and check out her website http://thebridgeofdeaths.com/.
NR
Follow her on Twitter, @M_C_V_Egan and check out her website http://thebridgeofdeaths.com/.
NR
Published on June 18, 2014 11:23
•
Tags:
beverly-hills-is-burning, blogs, m-c-v-egan, neil-russell, rail-black
Ask the Author
Hi all,
Hope you are all enjoying the summer and are finding enough time to read your copy of Beverly Hills is Burning.
I wanted to let you know that I have recently added the "Ask the Author" Feature to my Goodreads profile, so if you have a question about the writing process, Hollywood or maybe even one for Rail Black, please don't hesitate to stop by my profile and ask away.
https://www.goodreads.com/author/show...
Best,
NR
Hope you are all enjoying the summer and are finding enough time to read your copy of Beverly Hills is Burning.
I wanted to let you know that I have recently added the "Ask the Author" Feature to my Goodreads profile, so if you have a question about the writing process, Hollywood or maybe even one for Rail Black, please don't hesitate to stop by my profile and ask away.
https://www.goodreads.com/author/show...
Best,
NR
Published on July 09, 2014 16:45
•
Tags:
ask-the-author, beverly-hills-is-burning, neil-russell, rail-black
Goodreads Giveaway
Between July 10th and July 24th, I am giving away 5 personalized, autographed copies of my latest novel, Beverly Hills is Burning. This giveaway is open to people living in the USA, Canada, Great Britain, and Australia.
All you have to do is go here and enter:
https://www.goodreads.com/giveaway/sh...
Feel free to pass this along to any interested friends on Goodreads, Facebook, Twitter, etc.
Good luck!
-NR
All you have to do is go here and enter:
https://www.goodreads.com/giveaway/sh...
Feel free to pass this along to any interested friends on Goodreads, Facebook, Twitter, etc.
Good luck!
-NR
Published on July 11, 2014 11:37
•
Tags:
beverly-hills-is-burning, giveaway, neil-russell
How I Became Involved With the Hmong
Thanks very much for your interest in my novels.
My involvement with Hmong children disabled by mines was prompted by an American Special Forces officer who had returned to Southeast Asia following the Vietnam War. Though a heart issue had kept me from being able to serve in the military, I supported organizations that worked for the welfare of our men and women in uniform. It was through one of these organizations that I met Col. Frederick Caristo, a highly-decorated and an even more highly-respected SF warrior. For only one example of his bravery, I would encourage you to read the commendation for his Distinguished Service Cross, an award second only to the Congressional Medal of Honor. http://projects.militarytimes.com/cit...
In the mid-seventies, spurred by the United States military’s withdrawal from the region, Communist movements were taking control of large swaths of territory and running insurgencies against existing governments and indigenous people who did not join them. Despite the intellectual elite in the West who scoffed at the “Domino Theory,” Eisenhower and Kennedy had been proven correct. Southeast Asia was falling fast. The only remaining debating point was whether an insurgency became clients of the Soviets or the Chinese.
The bloodshed wreaked was unchecked and appalling, but after the long war in Vietnam, the American media, along with most of the public, was anxious to turn the page and be rid of such headlines and images. This was especially true regarding Laos, where the so-called “Secret War” had been fought and where many believed—myself included—that American POWs were still being held. Diplomats, then as now, had no easy solution to anti-American-sponsored insurgencies, so they shrugged and moved on to fresh geography.
The Laotian capital, Vientiane, had fallen to the Communist Pathet Lao almost immediately, and by the early 1980s, the Pathet Lao had solidified their hold on the majority of cities and people. The lone thorn in their side was an ancient mountain tribe known as the Hmong who, since the time of Christ, had ranged over Southeast Asia without regard for borders or governments—especially Communist ones.
Not only had the Hmong fought alongside the Americans during the Vietnam War, but they were an unrepentant foe who occupied the valuable hardwood forests that the Pathet Lao were anxious to harvest for hard currency. More to the point, the Hmong were animists who believed the forests were sacred. Therefore, destroying the giant trees was not only a desecration of the land; it was a spear to the heart of their spirituality. And for this they were willing to fight.
The Pathet Lao’s answer to this insolence was the same as that of totalitarian regimes since the beginning of time: genocide. And they vowed to exterminate the Hmong “to the last root.”
The Pathet Lao had a large, well-equipped army. Their officers had been trained by the Russians and Vietnamese and were professionally led. But large complements of troops and artillery are not made for mountain warfare. The Hmong’s tactics were to lure the Pathet Lao up steeply forested inclines until the soldiers were gasping for breath, then attack from all sides. It was brutal for the Communists, and they lost countless men.
Helped by the Soviets, the Pathet Lao hit upon a different approach: use helicopters to gas the forests while at the same time strewing the trails with small incendiary devices built to look like toys. The first would kill anyone who could not move fast enough to escape gas; the second was even more horrific. When a child picked up one of these colorful mines, it would either kill or maim him—often also taking out his mother, brothers and sisters too. (If anyone still believes the Soviets were “just like us” then he or she has not seen a child savaged by a mine toy.)
Soviet wisdom said that, in time, the terror would either drive the Hmong out of the hardwood mountains and into other countries, or they would beg for peace. Neither happened. The Hmong doubled down, ready to die as a people.
Enter Col. Caristo, who had fought alongside the Hmong during the war. Unable to turn his back on his friends and former allies, he returned to the mountains of Laos. And those of us who could help, did.
There are few Hmong left in Laos today. Or anywhere in Southeast Asia. If you travel there and happen to see something colorful near a trail, leave it where it is. Perhaps an old Pathet Lao soldier will pick it up.
My involvement with Hmong children disabled by mines was prompted by an American Special Forces officer who had returned to Southeast Asia following the Vietnam War. Though a heart issue had kept me from being able to serve in the military, I supported organizations that worked for the welfare of our men and women in uniform. It was through one of these organizations that I met Col. Frederick Caristo, a highly-decorated and an even more highly-respected SF warrior. For only one example of his bravery, I would encourage you to read the commendation for his Distinguished Service Cross, an award second only to the Congressional Medal of Honor. http://projects.militarytimes.com/cit...
In the mid-seventies, spurred by the United States military’s withdrawal from the region, Communist movements were taking control of large swaths of territory and running insurgencies against existing governments and indigenous people who did not join them. Despite the intellectual elite in the West who scoffed at the “Domino Theory,” Eisenhower and Kennedy had been proven correct. Southeast Asia was falling fast. The only remaining debating point was whether an insurgency became clients of the Soviets or the Chinese.
The bloodshed wreaked was unchecked and appalling, but after the long war in Vietnam, the American media, along with most of the public, was anxious to turn the page and be rid of such headlines and images. This was especially true regarding Laos, where the so-called “Secret War” had been fought and where many believed—myself included—that American POWs were still being held. Diplomats, then as now, had no easy solution to anti-American-sponsored insurgencies, so they shrugged and moved on to fresh geography.
The Laotian capital, Vientiane, had fallen to the Communist Pathet Lao almost immediately, and by the early 1980s, the Pathet Lao had solidified their hold on the majority of cities and people. The lone thorn in their side was an ancient mountain tribe known as the Hmong who, since the time of Christ, had ranged over Southeast Asia without regard for borders or governments—especially Communist ones.
Not only had the Hmong fought alongside the Americans during the Vietnam War, but they were an unrepentant foe who occupied the valuable hardwood forests that the Pathet Lao were anxious to harvest for hard currency. More to the point, the Hmong were animists who believed the forests were sacred. Therefore, destroying the giant trees was not only a desecration of the land; it was a spear to the heart of their spirituality. And for this they were willing to fight.
The Pathet Lao’s answer to this insolence was the same as that of totalitarian regimes since the beginning of time: genocide. And they vowed to exterminate the Hmong “to the last root.”
The Pathet Lao had a large, well-equipped army. Their officers had been trained by the Russians and Vietnamese and were professionally led. But large complements of troops and artillery are not made for mountain warfare. The Hmong’s tactics were to lure the Pathet Lao up steeply forested inclines until the soldiers were gasping for breath, then attack from all sides. It was brutal for the Communists, and they lost countless men.
Helped by the Soviets, the Pathet Lao hit upon a different approach: use helicopters to gas the forests while at the same time strewing the trails with small incendiary devices built to look like toys. The first would kill anyone who could not move fast enough to escape gas; the second was even more horrific. When a child picked up one of these colorful mines, it would either kill or maim him—often also taking out his mother, brothers and sisters too. (If anyone still believes the Soviets were “just like us” then he or she has not seen a child savaged by a mine toy.)
Soviet wisdom said that, in time, the terror would either drive the Hmong out of the hardwood mountains and into other countries, or they would beg for peace. Neither happened. The Hmong doubled down, ready to die as a people.
Enter Col. Caristo, who had fought alongside the Hmong during the war. Unable to turn his back on his friends and former allies, he returned to the mountains of Laos. And those of us who could help, did.
There are few Hmong left in Laos today. Or anywhere in Southeast Asia. If you travel there and happen to see something colorful near a trail, leave it where it is. Perhaps an old Pathet Lao soldier will pick it up.
Published on July 14, 2014 14:44
•
Tags:
hmong, neil-russell
Goodreads Giveaway - Wrapped
The Beverly Hills is Burning giveaway has ended and the winners have been selected. Rail Black is heading to Canada, the southern United States and...Australia.
The books are on their way today. Congratulations to all the winners and thank you to everyone who participated.
We will definitely be doing this again in some fashion. Had a lot of fun.
-NR
The books are on their way today. Congratulations to all the winners and thank you to everyone who participated.
We will definitely be doing this again in some fashion. Had a lot of fun.
-NR
Published on July 24, 2014 13:44
•
Tags:
beverly-hills-is-burning, giveaway, neil-russell, rail-black
Another Goodreads Giveaway - WILDCASE
Hello again everyone. It's time for another Goodreads giveaway since I enjoyed the last one so much.
Starting today and ending on August 20th, I am giving away 10 autographed copies of my second Rail Black novel, Wildcase. This giveaway is open to people living in the USA, Canada, Great Britain and Australia.
You can enter here:https://www.goodreads.com/giveaway/sh...
Good luck!
-NR
Starting today and ending on August 20th, I am giving away 10 autographed copies of my second Rail Black novel, Wildcase. This giveaway is open to people living in the USA, Canada, Great Britain and Australia.
You can enter here:https://www.goodreads.com/giveaway/sh...
Good luck!
-NR
Published on August 06, 2014 10:25
•
Tags:
giveaway, neil-russell, rail-black, wildcase


