The Wreck of The Alamo
by
Book Details
About the Book
At the height of the Arab oil embargo the price of oil was over $50 per barrel. The Alamo, an American-owned tanker with 500,000 tons of Iranian crude went aground off the Normandy Coast en route to Rotterdam.
The English economy was on the ropes, and the Brits courted the deep pockets of the oil-rich Arabs. The House of Lloyds struggled to keep up a stiff financial upper lip, as it rotted from greed.
American intelligence, accustomed to leaning on the British, was now expected to lead the New World Order.
Hoping to orchestrate public opinion on the eve of the Israeli-Egyptian Peace Accord, the Mossad captured the mastermind of the Munich Olympic Massacre of 16 Israeli athletes and sent him to The Hague. It was no coincidence that he was aboard the Alamo.
The power struggle in the Mideast was escalating, and the friendly government of Iran fell under the rising tide of Islamic fundamentalism. Jihadism and terror was being exported to London and Paris. (Terrorism had not reached America-but the signals for a major catastrophe were fermenting.) Americans were taken hostage in Iran, and Ronald Reagan was elected president to restore America's dignity.
The Wreck of the Alamo is a work of historical-fiction that exposes Texas-style Big Oil, Lloyds, The French, The English, The Israelis, The Arabs, and the worldwide Terrorist network.
About the Author
A native of Los Angeles, Norman worked through film school by directing theater. At 28 he was a first-call studio cameraman with credits including the New York filming ?Mean Streets.?
He lectured at Art Center College and directed Exxon?s Pavilion at EPCOT and wrote THE WRECK OF THE ALAMO an historical fiction-thriller about Big Oil.
From 1996 to ?98 he wrote, produced and directed ?Snake Skin Jacket? and ?The Murder in China Basin.? He wrote THE ASSASSIN FROM STAVANGER a political-thriller and a non-fiction book, THE DEMISE OF THE AMERICAN INDEPENDENT FILM MOVEMENT. He recently completed THE DUNSMORE DOSSIER?the oil grab and excuse for the Iraqi war, political-fiction.