Interview with Tim Ashby, Author of Time Fall

Last night I listened to The Joe Show with Joe Crawford and he interviewed, Tim Ashby – the author of Time Fall which we’re Tim Ashby Author of Time Fallpromoting in June. They talked about the time travel element of Tim’s book. Lt. Art Sutton’s team of six US Rangers parachute into Nazi Germany…  but they vanish in 1945.  They land, a few minutes later, in 2011. The Rangers are unaware of the passage of time all around them and the valiant, misguided soldiers begin to attack “enemy” targets.

When the show ended, I turned on The Twilight Zone and it was “The Last Flight” – which is about a WWI pilot who took off in 1917, and lands in 1959 — http://www.tv.com/shows/the-twilight-zone/watch/the-last-flight-12602 — you should check it out and you also need to check out this interview.

Friday, you can hear a replay of the interview with Tim Ashby – he’s on the second part of the show and you can hear it Friday May 24th at 5am, 10am and 4pm EST Just click on www.revealingtalkradio.com to hear their conversation…. for more information, visit www.timefallbook.com

 

Time Fall by Tim Ashby

Time Fall Synopsis

Time Fall by Tim Ashby

Berlin, present day.  Hanno Kasper, Germany’s anti-terrorism czar and unrepentant Nazi apologist, reminisces about the day in April 1945 when as a 12-year-old Hitler Youth he was awarded the Iron Cross by Adolf Hitler.

April 1945.  On a secret mission of sabotage and assassination, a six-man US Rangers team prepares to parachute through a severe electrical storm into Nazi Germany, weeks before the end of World War II. The team is led by Art Sutton – a wholesome, college-educated lieutenant – and includes Sergeant Hugo Roth, a German-born Jew with a personal vendetta to kill as many Germans as possible.

During the flight, Sutton shows his good luck charm, a 1930s Roosevelt campaign button, to a crewman.

The Rangers jump–and vanish. Missing in Action for seven decades.

2011. Sutton’s team lands on target in a forested area of Bavaria. Unaware of the passage of time, the men attack a US base and other sites that long ago had been World War II German installations. Believing the Rangers to be terrorists, Kasper leads Germany’s elite counterterrorism unit in a hunt for them.  He orders the unit to take no prisoners.

Sutton’s team assaults an abandoned Nazi SS camp that is being used as a staging area for a real terrorist unit planning a massacre at a Youth Congress.  During the attack, Sutton is knocked unconscious and one of his men, Sarnoff, is killed. Roth takes command of the surviving Rangers. Carrying Sutton, the Rangers go to a remote mansion where Roth plans to assassinate Major von Scheller, a Luftwaffe hero during the War. Von Scheller’s granddaughter, Paula, a medical student, is staying with him.

Time Fall by Tim AshbyRoth spares the octogenarian von Scheller, refusing to believe that he is the young officer he had sought to kill. The Rangers spend the day at the von Scheller home, while Paula tends to the comatose Sutton. Talking to the Rangers who guard them, the von Schellers’ outrage turns to bafflement, then a realization that the young American soldiers are truly visitors from the past.  They try to convince the Rangers that 66 years have passed, but Roth furiously intercedes. The Rangers depart, leaving Sutton behind.  Roth is determined to wreak vengeance on Germans.

Sutton revives and the von Schellers persuade him that he has landed in a future world very different from 1945.

The corpse of Sarnoff, the Ranger killed at the old SS camp, is found.  His autopsy report and military ID are sent to Washington, DC. The case is assigned to Eddie Cassera, a burned out Vietnam veteran working as an investigator for the US government agency that identifies remains of the Missing In Action (MIA).

Aware that Kasper intends to hunt down and exterminate his men, Sutton and Paula set out on a mission to save the surviving Rangers and prevent them from committing more attacks.  Romance blossoms between them. Sutton tells Paula about the long lost world of the 1930s and ‘40s, promising to teach her to dance to the Big Band hits that he loves.

Meanwhile, in Washington DC, Cassera uses modern forensics and old-fashioned detective work to establish that the newly deceased Sarnoff was a member of a US Ranger team that had been MIA for 66 years.  Realizing that news reports about terrorism in Bavaria are related to the missing Rangers, Cassera flies to Germany and launches his own quest for them.

After more attacks, Roth and the three surviving privates are trapped in a remote cabin by Kasper’s counter-terrorism force. Sutton and Paula are captured while en route to the siege.  Kasper prepares to destroy the cabin and what he believes are terrorists within, after which Sutton and Paula will be “shot while trying to escape.”

Cassera arrives, bluffs the Germans into a temporary cease-fire, then rescues Sutton and Paula by holding their guards hostage. Sutton goes to the cabin to convince his men to surrender.  Kasper kills Cassera and is shot by one of the Rangers in the cabin.

Sutton makes it to the cabin and finds only Roth alive after the Ranger who shot Kasper is killed by a barrage from the Germans. Sutton tries to convince Roth that the War is long over, and that he must surrender. Roth refuses, runs from the cabin with Thompson submachine gun blazing, and is cut to pieces by the Germans.  Sutton slips out of the cabin as darkness descends.  Minutes later, the cabin is destroyed by mortar fire.

June 2012.  Aboard a “Big Band” cruise, an elderly World War II veteran and his wife observe a young couple jitterbugging to the music of Benny Goodman and Glen Miller. The veteran is the same air crewman who had spoken to Sutton seven decades earlier on the aircraft transporting the Rangers on their mission.  The old man thinks the younger male dancer looks familiar.  As both couples go to their cabins later, the young man drops something and the veteran picks up a Roosevelt campaign button last seen in 1945.  With a shock, he recognizes Sutton.

Full tour details are posted here - http://bookpromotionservices.com/2013/05/08/time-fall-virtual-tour/

Pamela K. Kinney Hosts David Leroy

David Leroy shares a guest post titled “A Modern Book of the Dead” at Fantastic Dreams of Pamela K. Kinney — http://pamelakkinney.blogspot.com/2013/01/a-modern-book-of-dead.html

Rich in historical detail and full of suspense, The Siren of Paris explores the journey of one American from medical student, to artist, to political prisoner at Buchenwald Concentration Camp during World War II.

Marc, a French born American student, never suspected that he would become trapped in German occupied France when he came to Paris in the summer of 1939 to study art. While smuggling a downed airman out of the American Hospital, through the Paris resistance underground, his life is plunged into total darkness when someone he trusts becomes a collaborator agent for the Gestapo. Marc then must fight to save his soul when he is banished to the “Fog and the Night” of Buchenwald, where he struggles with guilt over the consequences of having his trust betrayed.

For more information about this virtual book tour, including excerpts from reader reviews and the tour schedule, please see: http://bookpromotionservices.com/2012/05/22/siren-of-paris-tour/ To order a copy of The Siren of Paris please visit: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0088CA098

David Leroy Is Featured Guest At Historical Fiction Connection

David Leroy shares a guest post titled “The Ghost Named Why” at The Historical Fiction Connection — http://www.hf-connection.com/2013/01/welcoming-david-leroy-author-of-siren.html, in which he explores the spiritual journey of the protagonist of his World War II novel, The Siren of Paris.

Rich in historical detail and full of suspense, The Siren of Paris explores the journey of one American from medical student, to artist, to political prisoner at Buchenwald Concentration Camp during World War II.

Marc, a French born American student, never suspected that he would become trapped in German occupied France when he came to Paris in the summer of 1939 to study art. While smuggling a downed airman out of the American Hospital, through the Paris resistance underground, his life is plunged into total darkness when someone he trusts becomes a collaborator agent for the Gestapo. Marc then must fight to save his soul when he is banished to the “Fog and the Night” of Buchenwald, where he struggles with guilt over the consequences of having his trust betrayed.

For more information about this virtual book tour, including excerpts from reader reviews and the tour schedule, please see: http://bookpromotionservices.com/2012/05/22/siren-of-paris-tour/ To order a copy of The Siren of Paris please visit: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0088CA098

David Leroy Visits Ciska’s Book Chest

The inspiration for The Siren of Paris, David Leroy’s historical novel of France during World War II, came from a beautiful statue. He explores this in a guest post at Ciska’s Book Chest — http://mybookchest.blogspot.com/2013/01/author-david-leroy.html

Rich in historical detail and full of suspense, The Siren of Paris explores the journey of one American from medical student, to artist, to political prisoner at Buchenwald Concentration Camp during World War II.

Marc, a French born American student, never suspected that he would become trapped in German occupied France when he came to Paris in the summer of 1939 to study art. While smuggling a downed airman out of the American Hospital, through the Paris resistance underground, his life is plunged into total darkness when someone he trusts becomes a collaborator agent for the Gestapo. Marc then must fight to save his soul when he is banished to the “Fog and the Night” of Buchenwald, where he struggles with guilt over the consequences of having his trust betrayed.

For more information about this virtual book tour, including excerpts from reader reviews and the tour schedule, please see: http://bookpromotionservices.com/2012/05/22/siren-of-paris-tour/ To order a copy of The Siren of Paris please visit: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0088CA098

Pamela Thibodeaux Hosts David Leroy

Author and blogger Pamela S. Thibodeaux shares an excerpt from The Siren of Paris, David Leroy’s novel of the French resistance in World War II — http://pamswildroseblog.blogspot.com/2013/01/vbt-david-leroy-siren-of-paris.html.

Rich in historical detail and full of suspense, The Siren of Paris explores the journey of one American from medical student, to artist, to political prisoner at Buchenwald Concentration Camp during World War II.

Marc, a French born American student, never suspected that he would become trapped in German occupied France when he came to Paris in the summer of 1939 to study art. While smuggling a downed airman out of the American Hospital, through the Paris resistance underground, his life is plunged into total darkness when someone he trusts becomes a collaborator agent for the Gestapo. Marc then must fight to save his soul when he is banished to the “Fog and the Night” of Buchenwald, where he struggles with guilt over the consequences of having his trust betrayed.

For more information about this virtual book tour, including excerpts from reader reviews and the tour schedule, please see: http://bookpromotionservices.com/2012/05/22/siren-of-paris-tour/ To order a copy of The Siren of Paris please visit: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0088CA098

Siren of Paris Giveaway at Beth’s Book Reviews

Beth’s Book Reviews is hosting a giveaway, raffling off three copies of The Siren of Paris by David Leroy. There are still several days left to enter – http://www.bethsbookreviews.com/2012/12/giveaway-siren-of-paris-by-david-leroy.html

Rich in historical detail and full of suspense, The Siren of Paris explores the journey of one American from medical student, to artist, to political prisoner at Buchenwald Concentration Camp during World War II.

Marc, a French born American student, never suspected that he would become trapped in German occupied France when he came to Paris in the summer of 1939 to study art. While smuggling a downed airman out of the American Hospital, through the Paris resistance underground, his life is plunged into total darkness when someone he trusts becomes a collaborator agent for the Gestapo. Marc then must fight to save his soul when he is banished to the “Fog and the Night” of Buchenwald, where he struggles with guilt over the consequences of having his trust betrayed.

For more information about this virtual book tour, including excerpts from reader reviews and the tour schedule, please see: http://bookpromotionservices.com/2012/05/22/siren-of-paris-tour/ To order a copy of The Siren of Paris please visit: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0088CA098

David Leroy Visits Allison at Musings of a Book Junkie

For a long time after Hitler’s Germany began invading other European countries, the French felt complacent. They didn’t believe the war would affect them. What gave them this sense of false security? David Leroy, author of The Siren of Paris, explores this question in a guest post at Musings of a Book Junkie: http://themusingsofabookjunkie.blogspot.com/2012/08/guest-post-with-david-leroy-author-of.html

Rich in historical detail and full of suspense, The Siren of Paris explores the journey of one American from medical student, to artist, to political prisoner at Buchenwald Concentration Camp during World War II. It also delves into the French resistance during the Second World War.

Marc, a French born American student, never suspected that he would become trapped in German occupied France when he came to Paris in the summer of 1939 to study art. While smuggling a downed airman out of the American Hospital, through the Paris resistance underground, his life is plunged into total darkness when someone he trusts becomes a collaborator agent for the Gestapo. Marc then must fight to save his soul when he is banished to the “Fog and the Night” of Buchenwald, where he struggles with guilt over the consequences of having his trust betrayed.

For more information about this virtual book tour, including excerpts from reader reviews and the tour schedule, please see: http://bookpromotionservices.com/2012/05/22/siren-of-paris-tour/ To order a copy of The Siren of Paris please visit: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0088CA098

What Motivated Nazi Collaborators? David Leroy at Cheryl’s Book Nook

What would drive someone to betray her lover … or her country? Historical fiction author David Leroy delves into the point of view of a Nazi collaborator in his guest post, “Who Is the Siren of Paris?”, at Cheryl’s Book Nook. Leroy’s debut novel, The Siren of Paris, explores the French resistance and counter-resistance during World War II: http://cherylsbooknook.blogspot.com/2012/08/who-is-siren-of-paris-by-david-leroy.html

Rich in historical detail and full of suspense, The Siren of Paris explores the journey of one American from medical student, to artist, to political prisoner at Buchenwald Concentration Camp during World War II.

Marc, a French born American student, never suspected that he would become trapped in German occupied France when he came to Paris in the summer of 1939 to study art. While smuggling a downed airman out of the American Hospital, through the Paris resistance underground, his life is plunged into total darkness when someone he trusts becomes a collaborator agent for the Gestapo. Marc then must fight to save his soul when he is banished to the “Fog and the Night” of Buchenwald, where he struggles with guilt over the consequences of having his trust betrayed.

For more information about this virtual book tour, including excerpts from reader reviews and the tour schedule, please see: http://bookpromotionservices.com/2012/05/22/siren-of-paris-tour/ To order a copy of The Siren of Paris please visit: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0088CA098

Siren of Paris Spotlight and Giveaway at Knitting & Sundries

Julie is spotlighting The Siren of Paris by David Leroy and hosting a book giveaway at Knitting and Sundries. Please stop by and check it out! — http://www.knittingandsundries.com/2012/12/the-siren-of-paris-by-david-leroy-book.html

Marc, a French born American student, never suspected that he would become trapped in German occupied France when he came to Paris in the summer of 1939 to study art. While smuggling a downed airman out of the American Hospital, through the Paris resistance underground, his life is plunged into total darkness when someone he trusts becomes a collaborator agent for the Gestapo. Marc then must fight to save his soul when he is banished to the “Fog and the Night” of Buchenwald, where he struggles with guilt over the consequences of having his trust betrayed.

For more information about this virtual book tour, including excerpts from reader reviews and the tour schedule, please see: http://bookpromotionservices.com/2012/05/22/siren-of-paris-tour/ To order a copy of The Siren of Paris please visit: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0088CA098

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