
Tiger Chair
A Short Story
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Compra ahora por $1.99
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Narrado por:
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Greg Chun
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De:
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Max Brooks
When China invades America, guerrilla warfare explodes on the streets of Los Angeles in this provocative short story about the future of war from Max Brooks, the #1 New York Times bestselling author of World War Z.
China thought it would be a quick war, an easy war. But now, years later, as the insurgency on the streets of Los Angeles escalates but the propaganda never changes, a Chinese officer can’t keep silent any longer. Torn between loyalty to his country and loyalty to his troops, he writes a brutally honest—and possibly suicidal—letter home to unmask the truth.
Brooks combines his signature meticulous research with unforgettable characters in this landmark work of speculative fiction.
©2024 Max Brooks (P)2024 Brilliance Publishing, Inc., all rights reserved.Listeners also enjoyed...




















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too short
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Awesome
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amazing
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Too Short but Great
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Fantastic! I want more.
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Wish there was more!
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a stunning indictment if the forever wars
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. . . you really ought to be ashamed of yourself, talented sir!
Max Brooks! Please please please give us more and NOW!
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His writing has been extraordinary in everything I've read of his, and this is the same I admit I was initially a bit disappointed to see he didn't narrate, but I needn't have been. Narrator is excellent.
Quite a few strong and conflicting feelings throughout this story. I'm a bleeding heart, ACLU card-carrying Liberal very against war and killing each other; I am also a strong supporter of our military troops. I found myself livid at the described invasion/occupation of my country while also nodding in agreement as I recognized that those things that make me livid are familiar because that's exactly the terms, propaganda, and behavior that our government and military have imposed on every country we've sent our military into at least in my lifetime (50ish years, I was born almost exactly as the Tet Offensive began in Vietnam.).
Unsurprising, my conclusion goes back to please we need to accept we're all the same. We all breathe, love, hurt, desire, and every single human is worth exactly the same as every other human. We're all family. Killing and harming each other hurts every single one of us. Nations are just line drawings. We do not have to like each other, but we need to respect each other. Or we can keep wasting our short time alive fighting, dividing, killing, and retaliating until whatever eventually ends our beautiful planet's ability to sustain us.
It's your choice as much as mine.
Wow. The kind of story that needs to bake in your head a bit.
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This was great! I wish he made this into a novel.
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