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Unintended Consequences Paperback – January 1, 1996
- Print length863 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherAccurate Press
- Publication dateJanuary 1, 1996
- Dimensions6.25 x 2.25 x 9.5 inches
- ISBN-101888118040
- ISBN-13978-1888118049
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Product details
- Publisher : Accurate Press (January 1, 1996)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 863 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1888118040
- ISBN-13 : 978-1888118049
- Item Weight : 1 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.25 x 2.25 x 9.5 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #877,493 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #38,974 in Suspense Thrillers
- #45,810 in American Literature (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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One of the longest novels I ever read along with a few others but this one takes the cake.
Layers & layers of history along with fictional characters and events that happen within the story takes a lot time to get through and a very slow start so the main plot of the story doesn't happen until you reach near the end of this novel so anyone thinking of reading this book I will warn you, you can not skip to the main plot of the story as you need to understand how these characters work, what shapes them into who they become later on and what causes them to act.
The start of the novel takes you to 1906 when American begins it's modern gun culture and the following events that shapes the country. Then you read events of FBI abusing and killing people over lack of evidence from the mid 30s till 60s and early 70s. Also it takes the read into the outbreak of WWII where Irwin Mann loses his wife from the Nazi's and is sent to death camps but gets a group of Jewish prisoners together and form a resistance fighting against the Nazi's. During the heat of WWII Walter Bowman a ace pilot battles the Japanese as he plans to settle down after the war which he does and finds a wife and gives birth to our hero in this story and that's Henry Bowman.
Once you reach the year 1953 it won't take long for Henry Bowman to become part of American's gun culture.
Henry a very smart, skilled and talented young man starts collection weapons, goes shooting with his father and takes him in his plane flying over their town. However Henry goes through the dark events of 60s such as JFK assassination along with his brother. And during the late 60s Henry loses his father and goes through life events of copping with lose of his father. As life starts to get better again one event during early 70s changes all that when Henry along with his best friend David Web are out in the woods shooting crows when Henry witnesses a woman being raped by 4 men. They spot him and go to attack him but Henry is able to bring himself to shoot these men and help the woman. This event will help Henry later on in the story.
After his mother death Henry gets a job as a geologist and buys a large house with large sum of property so he and his friends can hang out, talk, drink beer and shoot their guns. Once you reach the late 70s to early 80s you'll be in the middle of this beast of a novel. Anyway back to the story.
Between 85-86 covers the events in Florida which lead to FBI shootout on April.6.1986 as Henry along with his friends talk about this a lot in the story and it's very detailed of what happened.
By late 80s Henry along with his friends are outraged with sudden stricken gun laws and feel their own government is hurting and abusing those only wishing to bear arms for their own freedom and Henry believes if this continues people will start to fight back. Finally we come to the 90s when all the events leading to the plot begin to happen. First with Ruby Ridge raid as ATF agents killed unarmed people which have broken no laws then in 1993 Texas Waco siege with crazed leader of David Koresh killed along with his followers and innocent bystanders including children who were burned alive inside that building. (Reviewer Note-David Koresh was one sick man but for those poor people to be trapped and burned alive. That isn't right.)
With ATF now facing criticism over these events along with those they have charged and arrested questioning their lack of evidence their about to make the biggest mistake ever. During a gun show Henry spots a ATF agent trying to trick him into giving in foe on weapons to use as evidence against him. Henry calls him out and embarrasses him along William Blair another ATF agent. Then in 1995 the Oklahoma City bombing happens which causes a fear of terrorist groups in American. After taping Henry and two other of his friends phone lines and watching them Blair plans to arrest all 3 men and make it look like their terrorist selling weapons along with owning drugs. However this plan is back fired when Henry dropping off an item to his friend Alan house spots the ATF agents about to bust into the house. Henry quickly grabs a gun along with night vision goggles and shoots a few of the agents only leaving 3 left.
Henry questions all of them when getting the truth out of Blair, Henry fears if he turns into the police they'll arrest him along with his two friends and ATF will continue to frame those who haven't done anything wrong. After recording what he wanted hear from Blair, Henry kills him goes over the files on the 3 raid plans including his own house. Henry decides it is time to fight back against corrupt ATF and US government. Henry dumps the bodies, cleans up the mess and goes after the remaining ATF agents in the area and sets up ambush for his house. Using a 20MM Solothurn S-18 100 anti-tank rifle Henry waits till 3 Blackhawk helicopters show up and kills the pilots causing all 3 helicopters to crash with one sinking to the bottom of a lake.
Henry quickly leaves and reaches his friend Alan and in forms him what has happened and what they must do. Together along with Henry girlfriend Cindy they begin taking out more ATF agents along with high ranking government members who are against 2nd Amendment. Henry also posts blogs informing every American the dirty secrets the President along with ATF are hiding. And isn't long before others join their battle. Mean while The President along with both FBI and ATF members try to pin point who behind these attacks but as the days go on more and more agents are being killed or resigning from ATF. With the help of Ray Johnson another friend of Henry who informs the President he has many clients who wish to press charges against any agent who has harmed friend or family member from abuse or death causing more pressure for the President. And when Henry gives the recorded tape of William Blair to CNN causing a full shock to American and Greenwell who is later ordered to step down as director of ATF.
By the end of the novel the President gives up and orders ATF to disband along with releasing those who have been charged by them along better gun laws to give his people more freedom and is also stepping down as President to insure this civil war will come to end. However two agents of both FBI and ATF find one clue to ambush at Henry house and believe Henry was the one behind it all. But before they can reach him during a flight to his house once again Henry gains upper hand killing Greenwell director of ATF which Henry was hiding in the plane and is about to finish off FBI agent. During the President last day in the White House he is glad he hasn't heard from the two agents as he wants this war to be over and it is.
Wow this was one hell of a novel to read. If I haven't read books by Robert Ludlum, Stieg Larsson and Robert R. McCammon's Swan Song I don't think I would read this wonderful novel. It is filled with endless detail on people, places, events, fire arms, ect. The novel is almost like going back in time and watching how events changed and shaped the world and the impact it does to them.
Despite their being not much action once the plot of the story gets going it's how it was written that I liked. I didn't get bored reading from the start as I knew I would have to wait for main plot to get going as I said before reading this book takes time. Even if your a speed reading you won't cover much quickly and specially with all the characters you read through this novel their a lot to cover through this book.
I highly recommend this book for it's well crafted driven story plot and interesting characters. I will also add during my review I left out other parts of the story since their so much detail in this novel I can't cover everything of it as you'll have read it for yourself to see the full story.
A special thanks to John Ross for writing this wonderful novel and I hope one day you'll be selling your next novel some time soon.
"Gun culture" is a misnomer, a term of disparagement from the leftist "gun control" (victim disarmament" fanatics. The story is about regular Americans who once celebrated their lives liberty and property without the constant, pervasive, intrusive second to second monitoring and regulation of every aspect of their lives and business ventures and what happens when once free men stake their lives, their fortunes and sacred honor to the restoration of liberty.
This book is about a dream turned nightmare by progressives over a centuries-long long march to absolute control, enslavement of a dumbed-down populace and despotism (viz. - the ever-vacationing president and his family).
Firearms, while central to the themes in the story, were and are central to US history as well. That "shot heard round the world" in Concord, Mass April 19 1775 on "Patriot Day" (another piece of historical revisionism from the left, we now call 9-11 "Patriot's Day" in dishonor to the men and women who truly defended liberty on Lexington green and elsewhere) was a DIRECT response to Governor General Gage's order to disarm the citizen militias in those towns, as they had been collecting arms, cannon, powder and shot in preparation for what they saw on the horizon. He sought to disarm them, in clear violation of the "rights of Englishmen" to arms from centuries earlier.
Attempting to disarm someone is explicit proof of a willingness to harm no different from someone taking a swing at your face because once someone ELSE is disarmed, you can do whatever the hell you WANT to them. Disarmament = victimhood. History proves this, and John Ross does a thorough job of outlining several long-standing infringements upon our natural, civil, God-given, Constitutional, HUMAN rights to keep and to bear arms, primarily focusing on the National Firearms Act (NFA) of 1934 and its effects on market values for certain types of firearms the US Supreme court ruled were the right of ordinary citizens to have in the 1939 case of Miller vs. US, which Ross also covers in much detail.
Ross sets the record straight on many historical events (Waco and Ruby Ridge assaults primarily but the murder of protesting WW 1 veterans in what is known as the Bonus Army is covered in detail and sets the stage for the rest of the book) to illustrate how the federal government has usurped broader powers than those delegated to it in the Constitution and he uses a "Rip van Winkle" literary tool to show how the changes over a 25-year period we had become inured to, gotten used to, would overwhelm someone who grew up under a less "regulatory" and outright oppressive government after returning to America from decades spent abroad. Does the camel even notice the straws that came before the one that broke its back?
The other tool he uses is a primary character whose hobbies revolve around accuracy and precision in firearms, planes, high-power trucks (he's a gear head), a recovering alcoholic - said alcoholism precipitated by an all-too-common homosexual rape he was the victim of and responded badly to by withdrawing from college and then from people. But he turns his life around. Sobers up and gets involved again.
Henry Bowman - our protagonist - offers an argument which should be obvious to anyone who is living today through the times of NSA spying, Presidential "disposition matrices" (as President Obeyme's kill-list is known euphemistically) targeting American citizens for assassination without due process of law, victim disarmament (i.e. - "gun control") laws and free-fire zones (gun-free areas like schools, malls, public buildings) and other such - once - unthinkable government assaults on citizens' rights. The argument is simple. You meet someone who would like you to let him chain you to the floor inside the back of his van. For your safety and security. That's pretty much it. He's going to do it. He says it won't hurt, he promises not to hurt you and explains that it's really for your own good. As a matter of fact he's going to FORCE you into the van and the handcuffs if you don't comply. At what point do you decide your life is in imminent danger and you can and should run, lash out, "fight or flight?" He uses this as metaphor for what our government is doing to the populace one edict - "Executive order" - one law, one alphabet agency regulation at a time. At some point in time the choice will be "get on the trains" or... else.
It always is.
He makes a very cogent argument that we are long past the point Claire Wolfe once wrote about, that "awkward time" - where "it's too late to work within the system and too soon to shoot the ba*tards." Cogent, clear, and justified by events out of the hands of "we the people," and often events which are "unintended consequences" of government regulation, legislation or rogue agencies carrying out secret agendas.
How much different would this story be today if Ross could factor in NSA spying, warrantless searches, police locking down entire neighborhoods in search of a single criminal (Boston Marathon), The ATF/DOJ "gun walking" program called "Fast and Furious," use of drones to assassinate American citizens without due process, the DHS "Army" with its thousands of fully automatic weapons, IED-proof tanks on our streets making random road blocks, 47% of the US population living off of the labor of the rest of us, illegal aliens given drivers' licenses and free college tuition, and all the rest? If you haven't noticed, a lot has happened in 25 years.
In Ross' words : "Today in America, honest, successful, talented, productive, motivated people are once again being stripped of their freedom and dignity and having their noses rubbed in it. The conflict has been building for over half a century, and once again warning flags are frantically waving while the instigators rush headlong towards the abyss, and their doom. It is my hope that these people will stop and reverse their course before they reach the point where such reversal is no longer possible."
So when police begin to call for the opportunity to break into peoples homes to confiscate their - formerly legal - firearms as just happened in Connecticut, how should "we the people" respond to such infringements of our unalienable rights?
Ross posits a sort of solution to this near the end of the story.
It is, however, as he confirms, "a work of fiction."
A man can dream, can't he?
Ross manages to cover a lot of the 20th century here in closely related topics, from the Warsaw ghetto uprising (also April 19, but in 1943), to the assault on the Branch Davidian SDA church in Waco in 1993, the Randy Weaver case (who won his suit and a large judgment against the government, by the way, but you'll never hear about that in mainstream media when they refer to "Ruby Ridge), to Ad Topperwein - an exhibition shooter from a bygone era - to snipers in WW2, the impossibility of Lee Harvey Oswald making the shots he did with the gun he used in Dallas Texas in 1963 and more.
Unintended Consequences is a complex novel. Fiction yes, but historical, political, economically-focused and can be enjoyed from any or all of those disciplines.
If you're looking for it, and you're reading this, get a copy. Get another for your friends.
And I wish it were available on Kindle.
Top reviews from other countries
This hard cover print addition was good quality.
There are soft cover copies out there direct from the original as well as PDF's of a prior edition with smaller font, and/or other changes leading to a different page count.
One change that would be advisable for future additions would be to add chapter numbers and chapter titles, as the text as rendered is broken into a few large sections, "books within a book" effectively.
I found out about the book via one of the UKs shooting forums and placed an order almost the same day.
As it says in the foreword/acknowledgements section, for the gun control freaks it's like a Stephen King novel.
Please, please, pretty please Mr. Ross - the story begs for an update based on the laws enacted and repealed since first publication. In other words an updated 2nd edition or a sequel (might be a tad difficult though as the story comes to a fairly abrupt - but well deserved - end )
If you can find a copy for less than the price of a kidney - buy it.
Remember that freedom isnt given it is earned.





