Among the good things I took from my time in the Army were, not necessarily in this order, an appreciation for green clothing, firearms, delightful and delicious C rations, and some one of a kind pals. Ed Aymar, whom I met when we were in signal school at Fort Gordon, Georgia, is one of the best. For reasons I failed to understand at the time Ed made the Army his home for thirty years and retired as a Lieutenant Colonel. He continues to this day working as a civilian satellite guru at the Pentagon in Washington, D.C. As a taxpayer I appreciate the fact that we have at least one squared away patriot looking out for us in the nation's puzzle palace on the Potomac.
Ed married a wonderful woman, Ilse, when he was stationed in Panama and they produced a son, Ed junior. I haven't seen young Eddie since he was about 15 and knew only that he had graduated from George Mason University, gotten married, and had been working at CSPAN. I had no idea that he was also a writer. Not only is he a writer but a scribe in the mystery/crime genre, my favorite.
I have long been a fan of wordsmiths like John D. MacDonald, James Lee Burke and Lawrence Block, and now: E. A. Aymar. He is new and he's good…very good. I have been reading his When the Deep Purple Falls, which is available free on his website at: eaymar.com and am excited about the publication of his new book, I'll Sleep When You're Dead, due out this fall.
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