Full description not available
M**S
Modern Elite Sniper Book
If you're a fan of military memoirs and action-packed war stories, The Reaper is a compelling read. It’s an exciting, firsthand look into the life of an elite sniper and the intense combat he faced. While it may not be the most introspective book on modern warfare, it delivers a raw and thrilling narrative for those interested in military history and special operations.
E**N
Great book. Incredible story.
Wonderfully written by a military kid that became a military soldier! I have a heart for military kids because of my nieces and nephew, they are heroes too.He has a grasp on the real world issues. Would love to see him get into politics.
D**E
Short, but Deadly Spec-Ops Deployment …
With plenty of modern combat narratives to read these days, it’s just a matter of finding the right one. I saw Nicholas Irving speak as a guest on a news show a month ago and was impressed with his no-nonsense manner of speaking. I decided to pick up THE REAPER to learn a little more about how he earned his credentials. While the book was a little slow to start, Irving’s account of his brief deployment in Afghanistan provides several gripping moments that offer another unique perspective of what the US military faces in Afghanistan.Irving is credited with 33+ kills over a four month span in Afghanistan as an Army Ranger. While his kill tally may have earned him the “Reaper” nickname, this book is not a kill-by-kill record. Instead, Irving opts to summarize seminal events that led him to become a Ranger and a sniper and focus on the moments that impacted him the most. Much of the book centers on the bond and mutual dependency experienced on a sniper team. Irving was paired with two individuals during the course his tour that were quite different. Irving does a good job illustrating his thoughts and actions throughout, giving readers a simplified, but comprehensive view of his experience in Afghanistan. We get a vivid depiction of the harrowing uncertainty facing those serving in such a desolate place.Irving tells his story matter-of-factly … there are no chest-thumping moments. Despite his prowess with a rifle, Irving presents himself as quite humble, even to the point of relaxing his rank around lower-ranked team-members with longer service records. Rather than detailing every mission, Irving opts to focus on those that he obviously felt were the most challenging and dangerous. His encounter with an enemy sniper known as “the Chechen” is one such mission; one that the author was fortunate enough to live through. Another close call that was particularly interesting was his being hunted by a roaming truck-mounted “Dushka” (heavy machine gun) that had him pinned down in a ditch of raw sewage with no avenue of escape. He details the elimination of some targets, but doesn’t dwell on tallies. In fact, one of the more memorable moments in the book didn’t even involve eliminating a target, but centered on his spotter falling into a “hole” while they were heading to an assigned location at night. This seemingly innocent event proved to be much more involved because the “hole” was estimated to be up to 80 ft. deep and required a difficult/dangerous helicopter extraction. Irving’s last mission proved to be one of the most bizarre combat encounters I’ve ever read about.THE REAPER is a solid combat memoir; it is certainly worth reading. I found Irving’s account providing a unique viewpoint of the war in Afghanistan. It illustrates that the danger being faced doesn’t simply come from the Taliban, but the environment itself. The book also re-affirms the competence, leadership and fortitude that the American Special Operations soldier is known for.
D**J
🖤🙏🏼 Reaper
Man what a wild book for real. Doesn't get any better for a sniper auto bio. Speechless really bro, thank you for your service
J**K
Great book
Great read! The Reaper is bada$$!
B**R
Excellent read!
Not really an autobiography as much as a highly readable account of a single deployment in Afghanistan, but the author comes off as an intelligent, honest, and highly skilled soldier. I've often wondered how the members of our professional military can endure multiple combat deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan without becoming disillusioned by the futility of attempting to help liberate people who neither want nor appreciate that help, and, in fact, see them as both infidels and invaders. Irving describes that burgeoning disillusionment beautifully, with no rancor or bitterness, and Brozek does a fine job of capturing his feelings and giving his story flow and interest. The truth I took from this is that even the best soldiers, and Rangers are definitely some of the finest, most disciplined and skilled soldiers in the world, cannot liberate a people unready and unwilling to liberate themselves. We may have accomplished some nebulous geopolitical goals in those wars, but liberating Iraq or Afghanistan were probably not among them. It makes me wonder whether our efforts were ever worth the life of even one Corporal Kopp, much less all the lives we sacrificed. While it makes me proud to read about men like Nicholas Irving and the men of his Ranger platoon, I can't help thinking that we owe them clearer goals and worthier causes if we're going to ask them to risk their lives for us. Such men are the backbone of this country, and their lives should never be squandered in uncertain wars and actions. There will come a day, after all, when our nation will truly need such men for its own survival, as it has in the past, and it would be a shame to discover at that point that we have used them up senselessly in wars fought for dubious reasons. That said, one can take nothing away from those men who stood and fought at their country's request. They did the jobs required of them selflessly and often heroically. If there is fault in their story it is solely ours who sat home safely while they went back and back and back again to war in far off hell holes. We should be careful what we ask of our best and bravest.
W**Y
wanders
An interesting tale of a sniper in modern day combat. On occasion the author wanders off from the story much like an old man who forgot what he was talking about. You have to pause and say how did we get to this topic from climbing over a wall? Nonetheless it was a good accounting of what our military is going thru and the difficulties of fighting an enemy that is not an organized army in uniform as in prior conflicts. This is the way wars are now and will be in the future fought. You don't know who wants to kill you. However it seems most everyone wants to do you in. Our politicians don't seem to get it and impose unrealistic rules of engagement that really at the least impair our troops ability to fight and at worst cost our troops injury and death. This is a good read.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
2 weeks ago