[Westchester911truth] good 9/11 novel is available now!

Connie Smith dimension04 at sbcglobal.net
Wed Mar 6 17:17:12 EST 2013







Review by Connie Cook Smith --

"Postmark 9/11: The Lost Letters that Reveal the Untold Story" is such a reality-based book that it's hard to believe it's a novel.

In fact, I would say that it's better classified as "historical fiction," wherein absolutely true moments in history are presented by fictional characters -- and these two fictional characters are themselves compelling and endearing. Their names, Tara Young and Blake Watson, even appear on the cover as the authors of this book.

Inside, the publisher's stated "authentication process" of the letters between Tara and Blake, which were "found in a Vermont farmhouse" and were only recently delivered confidentially to the publisher, sets the stage for even more credibility -- which this 9/11 Truth book richly deserves.

The letters begin in early August of 2001 and abruptly end less than a year later in 2002. Tara and Blake had just found each other as The Love of Their Lives earlier in 2001, but now were suddenly separated because Blake had to go on the run. He had been a security guard at the World Trade Center Towers when he and a co-worker checked out noises on a floor that was supposedly empty. What they saw there suddenly got them shot at and chased -- with Blake escaping, not knowing what happened to his co-worker -- or why they were shot at, at all.

After failed attempts to find his co-worker and close calls with strange agents visiting his apartment, Blake took off and found safety in Maine by re-connecting with a college buddy who had in their past gone on to grad work at M.I.T., as he is both a tech-and-intellectual genius. But now this friend named Rob was choosing to work as an auto mechanic in a rural area, living somewhat "off the grid." Or at least, preferring a low-profile and laid-back life.

This being back in 2001, before "everyone has a cell-phone," Blake had never bothered with that because he had his WTC corporate security cell, which he knew he must now abandon. And he'd never felt the need for a laptop then either. So in Maine -- except for his buddy Rob's occasional phone-lend to call Tara, and trips with Blake to the local library to get him up-to-speed online -- Blake must resort to old-fashioned letter-writing to keep in touch with Tara.

With their relationship being in its early (although intense) stages, they hadn't really publicized their romance with friends and family, waiting to see how it goes. The upside of this was that virtually no one knew of any connection between Tara and Blake when Blake had to flee. Therefore, at first anyway, Tara was not approached by the strange agents who were claiming to be "from the IRS" and who were contacting everyone they could find who might know Blake and his whereabouts.

The entire story unfolds in their letters. Because Blake has been pursued, and then because the 9/11 events commenced the following month, Blake had good reason to look online into everything that had happened. With what he himself had personally experienced, and with Rob's "bigger picture" intellect and knowledge of physics, it didn't take long for them to understand that the official story of brief fires from jet fuel, mere kerosene, could not possibly have exploded the Towers into dust and blown the terrified occupants into fragments.

Not only did this partially explain what Blake and co-worker had seen on the WTC empty floor back in August, but once you pull the thread of fact that brief kerosene fires could not have brought down the Towers, then the whole official fabric of lies begins to unravel -- detail for detail.

Meanwhile, Tara was experiencing New York's devastating losses up close and personal. Her very best friend was searched and searched for but never found, and her serving meals to the exhausted and sickened first responders, which went on for months, were traumatic. And Blake's absence and "the crazy letters" she kept getting from him about it all being an inside job -- replete with fact after indisputable fact -- wore her down and nearly ruined their relationship.

Then something happened that changed Tara's mind, proving that Blake was not the least bit crazy after all.

And so -- what became of this idealistic but frightened young couple? Besides the book being a basic tutorial in all the critical FACTS that the American people need to know about 9/11, it is a romance tugged at by global forces that need to be widely understood. One can only hope, at the conclusion of this true-to-life adventure, that a sequel soon will follow!

This review is on Facebook --

http://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/Postmark911/467004353345216?fref=ts

and will be posted on their website, where you also can order the book --

http://postmark911.com/







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