Blood Red Palms: The Adventurous Journey of the German Engineer Rudi Eichner
Book Details
Author(s)Peter Klessa Ramazani
ISBN / ASINB01BYVTBA8
ISBN-13978B01BYVTBA9
MarketplaceFrance 🇫🇷
Description
"I highly recommend you take a look at "Blood Red Palms". I'm certainly glad I did." John Whiter.
"I think i had a great read. I really loved the way the the author has described about Rudi's journey throughout. The way his plane was shot and where he landed and how he fell in love. The story kept the reader engaging and i was enjoying the historic times which was described very well. It's a very well written book and highly recommended one!" Jessy.
"A beautifully written story. The story is about a German Engineer, who ends up in LIbya when his plane is shot down. Peter Klessa has written a wonderful classic story, which has elements of adventure, history, suspense and love. Recommended to everyone." Gaurav The Reader.
The German engineer Rudi Eichner is on his Way from Egypt to Tunisia with a plane flown by his pilot Werner Krüger in the late 1970s. But he will never reach his destination.
In the Libyan desert he meets the mysterious Agent Akbar. He learns about a German woman held prisoner at Sheikh Muhammad Al-Hasani’s property in southwest Libya.
Saif Al-Hasani, the son of Sheikh Muhammad Al-Hasani kidnaps young girls of rich people in Mediterranean countries, sailing them to Libya with his motor yacht, where they are abused and sold by the Sheik.
Can Rudi Eichner and Agent Akbar rescue Julia and uncover the pedophile Sheik and put an end to the white slave trade?
A thrilling rescue mission with a conclusion you will never be able to guess.
” We approached the Medina's center, where there was a large crowd. They were mostly Targias, female Tuaregs, wrapped in their black robes making their purchases at the stores and jewelry stalls. In that regard, this little oasis city was no different from other small towns around the world. At one of the jewelry stalls, I was surprised to hear a female German voice behind me speaking in a hushed voice, "Do not turn around! I need your help. Come back here in the morning, but alone. Today there are too many of sheik Muhammad Al-Hasani's guards around." I carefully took a hand mirror and saw a Targia standing beside me of which I could only see her eyes and the bridge of her nose. The rest was hidden behind a face veil decorated with silver jewelry. Behind her, I could see a black-clad Tuareg approaching us.”
"I think i had a great read. I really loved the way the the author has described about Rudi's journey throughout. The way his plane was shot and where he landed and how he fell in love. The story kept the reader engaging and i was enjoying the historic times which was described very well. It's a very well written book and highly recommended one!" Jessy.
"A beautifully written story. The story is about a German Engineer, who ends up in LIbya when his plane is shot down. Peter Klessa has written a wonderful classic story, which has elements of adventure, history, suspense and love. Recommended to everyone." Gaurav The Reader.
The German engineer Rudi Eichner is on his Way from Egypt to Tunisia with a plane flown by his pilot Werner Krüger in the late 1970s. But he will never reach his destination.
In the Libyan desert he meets the mysterious Agent Akbar. He learns about a German woman held prisoner at Sheikh Muhammad Al-Hasani’s property in southwest Libya.
Saif Al-Hasani, the son of Sheikh Muhammad Al-Hasani kidnaps young girls of rich people in Mediterranean countries, sailing them to Libya with his motor yacht, where they are abused and sold by the Sheik.
Can Rudi Eichner and Agent Akbar rescue Julia and uncover the pedophile Sheik and put an end to the white slave trade?
A thrilling rescue mission with a conclusion you will never be able to guess.
” We approached the Medina's center, where there was a large crowd. They were mostly Targias, female Tuaregs, wrapped in their black robes making their purchases at the stores and jewelry stalls. In that regard, this little oasis city was no different from other small towns around the world. At one of the jewelry stalls, I was surprised to hear a female German voice behind me speaking in a hushed voice, "Do not turn around! I need your help. Come back here in the morning, but alone. Today there are too many of sheik Muhammad Al-Hasani's guards around." I carefully took a hand mirror and saw a Targia standing beside me of which I could only see her eyes and the bridge of her nose. The rest was hidden behind a face veil decorated with silver jewelry. Behind her, I could see a black-clad Tuareg approaching us.”










