Stardust by Robert A. Henricks
In the summer of 1947, just five minutes before its scheduled landing in Santiago, the Stardust, a commercial airliner operated by British Airways disappeared over the Andes Mountains near the border of Argentina and Chili.
The plane had mysteriously vanished without a trace and had remained hidden for fifty years until a startling discovery made by a pair of amateur mountain climbers.
A salvage operation carried out by the Argentine military recovered from among the wreckage, a note from someone on the aircraft offering a clue to a cache of Nazi loot pilfered during the war and which implicated a conspiracy linking the passengers on board.
A British diplomat and former RAF captain, Cooper Finch, was the apparent catalyst who had information as to the identities of those members of an organization created by a rogue element of disaffected officers gone into business for self-aggrandizement.
Evidence at the crash site leads investigators on the trail of stolen artwork hidden and unseen for half a century until the secrets of a clandestine organization called Stendec are uncovered.
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Author Bio:
Robert Henricks is the author of numerous novels dating back to 1984. He has most recently been concentrating on historical themes for his books which typically stem from a single event in the past.
A lifetime student of history, he caught the bug from his father and followed it through to a college degree in U.S. and European history. His path to becoming a novelist began in high school after being exposed to such inspirations as the Iliad, the Odyssey and War and Peace. This experience led to other outstanding works of historical fiction such as Mark Helprin’s ‘A Soldier of the Great War’ and Michael Shaara’s ‘Killer Angels’.
While his path to becoming a writer of fiction went through the history genre, his interests were not confined there. In the spy genre, Ian Fleming’s James Bond led to Len Dawson and the ‘Ipcress File’ then to Adam Hall’s ‘Quiller Memorandum’ and William Stevenson’s ‘A Man called Intepid’ and finally to a whole slew of novels by Tom Clancy. He became addicted to the world of fiction and in the 80’s completed the first of two novels in an espionage series regarding
an agent of the Treasury Department and artifacts of wealth and historical value. His degree in history has fueled his passion from historical periodicals such as ‘The Blue and the Gray’ to ‘American Heritage’. He enjoys keeping up with current events by spending the morning with the Los Angeles Times and a full pot of French roast. And of course he also appreciates a couple of hours watching Humphrey Bogart or anything from the 40’s as well as football on Sundays.
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