Bull's Eye
by James Adams
This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.
Buy on Amazon
Buy on Waterstones
*This page contains affiliate links, so we may earn a small commission when you make a purchase through links on our site at no additional cost to you.
Send NetGalley books directly to your Kindle or Kindle app
1
To read on a Kindle or Kindle app, please add kindle@netgalley.com as an approved email address to receive files in your Amazon account. Click here for step-by-step instructions.
2
Also find your Kindle email address within your Amazon account, and enter it here.
Pub Date 13 Sep 2016 | Archive Date 23 Sep 2016
Description
When two 7.5-mm rounds were shot point-blank into Gerald Bull's skull
in March 1990, it was the end of a life that had begun with great
promise and the beginning of a story that was to shock the world.
Exactly who killed him was not known, but the real mystery was the man himself and his legacy.
Born in Canada, Bull was the youngest person ever to receive a doctorate from the University of Toronto. His particular expertise was measuring the performance of objects in flight.
In the 1960s, he was involved in a joint U.S-Canadian venture to develop huge guns capable of firing satellites into orbit, but his dream of doing so was forced to end when funding for the project was cancelled. Moving away from pure space research, he turned to designing artillery and shells…
It was Bull who secretly designed the first Star Wars system, twenty years before Reagan announced his version.
It was Bull who designed special shells for the Navy to bombard North Vietnam.
In the late 1970s, the CIA encouraged Bull to build a new gun for the South Africans, despite the U.S. arms embargo.
It was artillery designed by Bull that confronted American troops during Operation Desert Storm — artillery that had a longer range than anything comparable in the Allied memory.
In this stunning work of investigative journalism, Bull’s Eye combines the excitement and drama of a thriller with a cast of extraordinary characters from the worlds of intelligence, government, and the arms business. This is the story of the most talented designer of artillery this century; a man betrayed, who in despair and anger fell into the world of seedy arms merchants and ambitious third world dictators.
Praise Bull’s Eye
‘Adams makes a fine job of accounting for the character quirks and socioeconomic forces that turned an enthusiastic, essentially apolitical boffin into a cynical supplier of advanced weapons systems--and into the target of assassins... An engrossing tale of geopolitical intrigue and treachery.’ - Kirkus Reviews
Praise for The Unnatural Alliance
‘uncovers a close, multi-faceted strategic relationship that has been consciously nurtured in secret.’ – Washington Report
James Adams was born in Newcastle, England in 1951. He was trained as a journalist on the Evening Chronicle, Newcastle, and after a period working in Africa and the United States became chief reporter and then news editor on 8 Days, a magazine specializing in the Middle East. He went on to become Managing Editor of the Sunday Times in London. Adams is an expert on warfare and intelligence and has had positions at the White House and the National Security Agency. He is married to the artist Patricia Frischer with whom he wrote the successful textbook, The Artist in the Marketplace.
Exactly who killed him was not known, but the real mystery was the man himself and his legacy.
Born in Canada, Bull was the youngest person ever to receive a doctorate from the University of Toronto. His particular expertise was measuring the performance of objects in flight.
In the 1960s, he was involved in a joint U.S-Canadian venture to develop huge guns capable of firing satellites into orbit, but his dream of doing so was forced to end when funding for the project was cancelled. Moving away from pure space research, he turned to designing artillery and shells…
It was Bull who secretly designed the first Star Wars system, twenty years before Reagan announced his version.
It was Bull who designed special shells for the Navy to bombard North Vietnam.
In the late 1970s, the CIA encouraged Bull to build a new gun for the South Africans, despite the U.S. arms embargo.
It was artillery designed by Bull that confronted American troops during Operation Desert Storm — artillery that had a longer range than anything comparable in the Allied memory.
In this stunning work of investigative journalism, Bull’s Eye combines the excitement and drama of a thriller with a cast of extraordinary characters from the worlds of intelligence, government, and the arms business. This is the story of the most talented designer of artillery this century; a man betrayed, who in despair and anger fell into the world of seedy arms merchants and ambitious third world dictators.
Praise Bull’s Eye
‘Adams makes a fine job of accounting for the character quirks and socioeconomic forces that turned an enthusiastic, essentially apolitical boffin into a cynical supplier of advanced weapons systems--and into the target of assassins... An engrossing tale of geopolitical intrigue and treachery.’ - Kirkus Reviews
Praise for The Unnatural Alliance
‘uncovers a close, multi-faceted strategic relationship that has been consciously nurtured in secret.’ – Washington Report
James Adams was born in Newcastle, England in 1951. He was trained as a journalist on the Evening Chronicle, Newcastle, and after a period working in Africa and the United States became chief reporter and then news editor on 8 Days, a magazine specializing in the Middle East. He went on to become Managing Editor of the Sunday Times in London. Adams is an expert on warfare and intelligence and has had positions at the White House and the National Security Agency. He is married to the artist Patricia Frischer with whom he wrote the successful textbook, The Artist in the Marketplace.
Available Editions
EDITION | Ebook |
ISBN | 9781537717470 |
PRICE | |