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About the Book:
Now three-quarters of the runway were left
behind; the far end was expanding sideways as it drew closer, with
huge snow- covered boulders beyond. Forty knots... thirty knots... The
end of the runway was now only six hundred feet away, and still coming
on fast... Now the plane began to bounce on the rough dirt at the end
of the runway; five hundred feet... four hundred... The boulders were
looming ominously ahead, like a shark's teeth; the plane was heading
straight for them.
When a routine scientific mission in
the Canadian Arctic goes terribly wrong and one of the men is badly
hurt, his only hope for survival is to have a surgeon airlifted to the
remote, deserted island where he is located. With a fierce polar
cyclone closing in and the Canadian helicopters grounded due to bad
weather, it is up to the rescue pilot Heather Mallory of the US Civil
Air Patrol, and her husband Rick Floyd, a field surgeon in the Army,
to carry out a desperate plan: they must fly in a twin-engine light
airplane to the very limits of its maximum range, where Rick is to
parachute to the island in high winds and perform the life-saving
surgery, while Heather tries to find a nearby airfield in heavy fog
and with her fuel supply nearly exhausted. Will they succeed in saving
the man's life... or will they, too, end up dead?
About the Author:
Dennis Kitainik
is a lifelong aviation enthusiast, a self-taught chemist and
historian, an author and songwriter, and above all an American
patriot. He lives in California, where he is currently studying
chemistry at San Jose State University.
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