Tensions are high in this high-octane naval thriller! Perfect for fans of Douglas Reeman, Michael DiMercurio, George Wallace and Don Keith.
The US Navy must race to avoid a nuclear apocalypse…
A renegade U.S. naval captain steals America's high-technology submarine the Shark.
With its missiles programmed to strike at the heart of multiple nations, the former captain of the Shark,Jack Boxer, takes command of an attack submarine to search for — and then destroy — America's greatest underwater weapon.
Except Boxer knows better than anyone else that a mere attack submarine doesn't have a chance against a weapon as formidable as the Shark.
His only choice now is to take on the Shark in combat — because if the Shark manages to fire its deadly load of nuclear missiles, all of mankind will burn in a sea of flames!
With all-out war only minutes away, can America and Russia join forceson the search-and-destroy operation?
Or is the North Atlantic about to become the launching pad for World War III…?
SEA OF FLAMES is the sixth book in the Depth Force action-packed naval adventure novels set in the 1990s and starring submariner Jack Boxer.
DEPTH FORCE BOOK 1: Depth Force BOOK 2: Death Dive BOOK 3: Bloody Seas BOOK 4: Battle Stations BOOK 5: Torpedo Tomb BOOK 6: Sea of Flames BOOK 7: Deep Kill BOOK 8: Suicide Run BOOK 9: Death Cruise BOOK 10: Ice Island BOOK 11: Harbor of Doom BOOK 12: Warmonger BOOK 13: Deep Rescue BOOK 14: Torpedo Treasure BOOK 15: Hot Zone BOOK 16: Rig War
Irving Greenfield was born in Brooklyn, New York. He was a youthful runaway, a merchant seaman, and a soldier during the Korean War, afer which his writing talent burst into print. His novel, The Ancient of Days, was a best-seller for six weeks and Tagget was made into a film for TV. his work has appeared in a variety of media, but, of all his works, Only the Dead Speak Russian is his masterpiece.
Camaraderie between Soviet & US Submarine Captains Continues
As a retired US submarine officer, I became engrossed with the relationship and respect shown between these two sub captains in this novel. Although I had problems with the author’s errors in submarine terminology (nomenclature, positions, abbreviations, depths, orders, and navigational directions), the storyline has been captivating. Spicing up the relationships often made me smile and provided an interesting twist, not evidenced in other submarine adventures read in the past. I thought these books were very enjoyable.