Set during the turbulent era of the Vietnam War, Counters is a quirky, thrilling story of air combat and of the young fighter pilots who blend the harsh reality of war with youth's untamed urges.
As the pilot of a sleek F-4C Phantom II, self-doubting Lieutenant Steve Mylder fights for his life in the skies above Vietnam in 1967 but battles for his soul against the Red Baron of his imagination. His cocky friend Avery-womanizer and master of the art of combat seduction-thunders fifty feet over a North Vietnamese beach, looks down, locks eyes with an improbable woman, and falls into hopeless love.
Steve and Avery count their missions, hoping against the odds that they'll make it back home alive instead of in a body bag. But liberating the recklessness in their souls is sometimes the only way to deal with the unknown, and the two friends soon realize that growing up is a lot harder than they thought.
In Counters, humor and whimsy counteract with authentic details of air combat brought to life by former air force pilot Tony Taylor, illuminating a brooding yet fanciful look at the hormones and ""warmones"" that impel young men to war and stupidity.
Editorial This book is destined to become a classic. The story is told by a young Air Force pilot caught up in the Viet-Nam war. He takes the reader, both mentally and physically, inside the minds and bodies of young men on the battlefield. The reader will fully sense how it feels to fly a F-4C Phantom II fighter jet. The vivid description of battles fought in the air, and also in barracks and clubhouse on the base where these young men live come to life. It’s a searing question of survival. The reader will finally deeply understand the camaraderie, as well as the life-long brotherhood of young men who have lived through a war together. The author is an extraordinarily gifted writer, who claims to have navigated spacecraft to every planet in the solar system. He makes that claim almost believable. – US Review of Books (for Hoffer Award Honorable Mention in Legacy Fiction)
An honest, engaging tale of living through war….a vivid contrast between swaggering language and graceful, even prose, which is underscored with deep internal subtext….brings a balanced and original perspective to a genre too often dominated by the action. —Kirkus Reviews
Sadly, Tony passed away August 7, 2019. I am his wife and will continue to manage his books.
Pilot, spacecraft navigator, author: Tony Taylor flew fighters in the Air Force and later navigated NASA spacecraft to all eight planets of the solar system, adding minor planet Pluto in 2015 to maintain bragging rights for “all the planets” in case it’s promoted to full planethood again.
His latest novel, The Darkest Side of Saturn, reflects many of his NASA experiences and won several honors, including First Place for Commercial Fiction in the 2016 Eric Hoffer Book Awards and Book of the Year in the 2015 Arizona Literary Contest. His first novel, Counters, drew on air combat experiences in Vietnam and won an Honorable Mention in the Hoffer Awards. Both books made the Short List for Grand Prize in that contest.
Tony lives with his wife Jan in Sedona, Arizona. He may not be the only interplanetary navigator in Sedona, land of vortices and UFO enthusiasts, but he’s probably the only one who actually worked for NASA.
"This is really it," he thought. "I’m in a war. If you have to die in the morning, you might as well enjoy the night before."
In the middle of November, 1996, Wing headquarters in RAF Bentwaters/woodridge, England received a teletype listing sixty-eight piolts' names chosen to report to Southeast Asia, ASAP. Noticing an error with the twenty-third name, which was "Garbled in transmission", Seventh Air Force requested a repeat and six days after the initial message they received a new list with all names intact. However, number twenty-three, First Lieutenant Hoskins, James R., has already left to be married and went on vacation for his honeymoon.
That's where Steve Mylder comes in. Needing a replacement pilot, Lieutenant Mylder volunteers himself for the position before he even realizes what he's done. Although he and Hoskins are friends, they aren't exactly close and Steve shocks even himself with his hastey actions.
"He wasn’t a warlike type of guy, either, even though he was a fighter pilot and proud of it. It had just never occurred to him quite as viscerally as then that the central occupation of fighter pilots was fighting."
A few days later he gets his orders, and prepares to leave to fight in the war.
Counters by Tony Taylor is a gripping story about a young fighter pilot who gets sent to fight in the Vietnam war. This isnt just a story about Steve Mylder being sent to war though, but of all the other fighter pilots he fought alongside of too. This story is about growing up, major life changing moments, friendships, loss and the aftermath of war, too. Wonderfully written with lighthearted humor and vivid details this historical war fiction will suck you in and leave you wishing for more.
The characters are all nicely fleshed out and the world building is great. Counters starts us off with an exciting prolouge of a vividly detailed first person POV of someone going through the motions of preparing to fly their plane and taking off. Its written so well you can almost imagine that you're the one truly experiencing it for yourself.
In fact, I found myself thinking "Wow, this author must have really done his research!" Only to find out later that most of his knowledge comes from experience and it definitely shows!
I don't normally read historical war fictions, but I would recommend this book to anyone who does or may have an interest in it.
**** I received an eBook copy of this title in exchange for an honest review. Thank you to Booktasters for introducing me to this author and thank you to Tony Taylor for giving me the chance to read and review his work. ****
A quite unorthodox description of what was felt by the soldiers on the American side during the Vietnam war...I've read many books on the subject, most of them unflinchingly long and technical, so this book was a refreshing change of pace. Told through a single unprepared fighter pilot's POV, this book clearly showcases the author's experiences itself or so I believe. This book offers a wide range of possibilities- sitting inside DOOM (insider joke!) and having a drink, shuddering at the thought of your hairy superiors, watching jets get blown to bits...it was all an eye-opener for young Steve Mylder. I liked Steve from the first line in which he appeared- he had such an innocent, I'm-still-too-young to take part in war quality to him that instantly endeared me. There were parts in the book where he told the story via a series of letters to a newspaper- those were my favorites. The guy knew when to be humble, when to take swift action, when to identify moral regresses. And when he decided to pursue his writing? Kudos, Steve! And although he was just a side character, Sam the collie has a special place in my heart. He was the perfect companion, even though a little too eager. In my opinion, the epilogue of the book was the most poignant one I've ever read. So for me, there was only one downside to this book- it ended much too soon. I could have read on for a couple hundred more...Still, I guess all good things must come to an end!