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Richard J. Parker

    This author delves into the depths of psychological suspense and dark mysteries. His narratives, shaped by a twenty-two-year career in television as a writer, editor, and producer, are characterized by meticulous plot construction and a keen insight into the human psyche. He places his protagonists in situations where the lines between pursuer and pursued blur, exploring the nature of obsession and fear. His work demonstrates a mastery of building tension and crafting surprising twists, drawing readers into a vortex of unsettling events.

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    The Railways of Pembrokeshire
    Stop Me
    Memoirs of a Foreign Service Arabist
    • 2013

      Memoirs of a Foreign Service Arabist

      • 312 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      "Dick Parker was renowned in the State Department for his acerbic wit. From his early youth on U.S. Cavalry posts across the Southwest to his World War II experiences, through a successful Foreign Service career as a leading Arabist in the Near East, he observed and commented on everything. He recounts his experiences as a lieutenant in the U.S. Army in Europe, acting with inadequate information, outmoded weaponry, and half-trained personnel (including himself) and describes the confusion in the Battle of the Bulge, fighting the enemy with no clear guidance from superiors or any indication that the Germans were closing in. Then came months as a German prisoner of war, exhaustion, sickness, and forced POW marches from Germany to Poland, meeting Russians coming the other way. Postwar, he completes his education and begins life as a career diplomat. Parker comments, often with wry humor, on the people and times around him, the thorny Middle East issues he dealt with, and the foreign and domestic potentates with whom he dealt. He recounts problems faced by Foreign Service families in difficult, often dangerous conditions while coping with a sometimes thoughtless, impersonal bureaucracy at home. He writes of hands-on diplomacy during critical periods in US relations during his (sometimes perilous) service in Israel, Jordan, and Egypt and, as U.S.ambassador, in Algeria, Lebanon, and Morocco. Especially revealing are his encounters with King Hassan II and Reza Shah Pahlavi and his entourage. Throughout, Dick Parker's personal touch gives striking immediacy to his fascinating autobiography."--Publisher's website

      Memoirs of a Foreign Service Arabist
    • 2010

      Leo Sharpe's life is shattered when his wife Laura suddenly disappears. His desperate need to find her turns to obsession when he becomes convinced she's the latest victim of The Vacation Killer who has claimed eleven lives already - is Laura going to be the twelfth?

      Stop Me
    • 2008

      The Railways of Pembrokeshire details the struggle to bring the railway to West Wales and explores how New Milford was established and developed as the port for Southern Ireland. From the Golden Age of rail travel it beautifully charts the history of the railway through two world wars, the early years of nationalization, the rise of the petroleum business on the banks of Milford Haven, and the subsequent demise of most of the former rail infrastructure.

      The Railways of Pembrokeshire