The book I read this six weeks was “Easy Day For The Dead – A SEAL Team Six Outcasts Novel” by Howard E. Wasdin and Stephen Templin. Wasdin was born on November 8th, 1961 in Boynton Beach, Florida. He served in the United States Navy 1983 – 1995. He was a member of SEAL team 2 during the Persian Gulf War, then got pulled to the United States Naval Special Warfare Development Group, A.K.A. "DEVGRU" and "SEAL Team Six". Templin was born in Los Angeles, California. He is a bestselling author in which his books have been translated into thirteen different languages.
In “Easy Day For The Dead - A SEAL Team Six Outcasts Novel”, you are sent on grueling missions with a SEAL team known as the “Outcasts”. You are set through missions with Alex, Pancho, John, Cat, and Laila. You are as well put through some of the missions that Major Kahn was put through in efforts to kill the outcasts. Throughout the book, you are put through a journey with the extensive explanation of the challenges and operations that occur. In the story, the outcasts are sent on a mission in Iran to destroy a nuclear test/launch facility in which if the plan would fail, the U.S. would claim no responsibility. The outcasts were and always will be expendable. When they destroy the facility, they catch word that a lead scientist had escaped and was air lifted to a hospital. They are given orders to go and kill her, yet when they get there, they are given an option. The scientist will expose a bio-chemical lab that had been formimg an agent that would wipe out half of the U.S. population at least, if they saved her husband from confinement. The SEALs are given no choice but to take the lead, and do what ever they can to stop the terrorists from destroying the U.S.
I believe the whole point of this book was to be a thrilling incite of the lives of the Navy SEALs. The book was amazing at giving immense detail in all the blood and gore of the situation and yet still gave it a story line to which a reader could follow. They took you around the world and explored different areas in which they battled. I believe that the author was trying to say, “This is what we do just to keep some sort of peace in the world, even if it means giving ours away for possible death.”
I loved this book; I believe it had the perfect ratio between story line works, blood and gore fighting, and the horrors of being in situations of the world. If I were to change anything in this book, I would change nothing. This book was written by authors that have been in these situations, and how can you get any better than a first-hand look?
If you are a person that likes blood, action, and yet a storyline to follow along by, this is the book for you. I cannot stress enough how much detail has gone in to this book to make it as accurate as possible. All of the abbreviations, weapon modifications, and equipment can be projected in your mind by the amount of detail that is put forth.