Difference between revisions of "The Cat In The Convoy"

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==Book Description==
 
==Book Description==
  
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The gunner at his station was dead. And Armed Guard Lieutenant Jim Marcey knew it was murder - murder not for gain, but part of a larger, grimmer scheme.
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The night it all began was one of those unreal ghostlike nights when the sea has a thousand voices and all of them whisper of danger. On all sides the convoy slashed through the dark night. On the outskirts, the submarine wolf pack was hunting them.
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Clutched in the dead man's hand was a glass cat; obviously a significant clue, if Jim could understand its meaning. Before long it became apparent that there were others, sinister men and women, who also sought the secret. Was the answer to be found in New York? Or in Cairo? Or in London? Jim had to find it; through danger, in desperate back ways, in spite of sudden death and ever-present peril.
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With the help of attractive "Twenty" O'Neil, to whom he was engaged, Jim fits the pieces of the puzzle together and averts a catastrophe that might have had international repercussions.
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                                      *            *            *
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William G. Schofield has turned to good account his wartime experience as a gun crew officer in this crackling, action-laden tale of love and espionage.
  
 
==Cover Variation (By Release Date)==
 
==Cover Variation (By Release Date)==

Latest revision as of 08:50, 3 February 2013

1959 US Edition
By William G. Schofield
Publisher Harlequin Romance #470
Release Month 1959 (US)
Harlequin Romance Series #
Preceded by Maggy
Followed by Nurse Hilary

Book Description

The gunner at his station was dead. And Armed Guard Lieutenant Jim Marcey knew it was murder - murder not for gain, but part of a larger, grimmer scheme.

The night it all began was one of those unreal ghostlike nights when the sea has a thousand voices and all of them whisper of danger. On all sides the convoy slashed through the dark night. On the outskirts, the submarine wolf pack was hunting them.

Clutched in the dead man's hand was a glass cat; obviously a significant clue, if Jim could understand its meaning. Before long it became apparent that there were others, sinister men and women, who also sought the secret. Was the answer to be found in New York? Or in Cairo? Or in London? Jim had to find it; through danger, in desperate back ways, in spite of sudden death and ever-present peril.

With the help of attractive "Twenty" O'Neil, to whom he was engaged, Jim fits the pieces of the puzzle together and averts a catastrophe that might have had international repercussions.

                                      *             *            *

William G. Schofield has turned to good account his wartime experience as a gun crew officer in this crackling, action-laden tale of love and espionage.

Cover Variation (By Release Date)

1959 <br\>US Edition