
The Pacer: An American Story
by David Paramore
Follow our hero David Palmer from the jungles in Vietnam back to his roots in North Florida and on to the plains of Wyoming along the North Platte! This Romantic Adventure has something for everyone! It is truly an American Story! Hint, "The Pacer" is not about building airplanes!
Synopsis:
David Palmer survived a year in the jungle in Vietnam only to return home to North Florida to find that his former life has passed him by. His girlfriend was marrying someone else. All of his friends were half-way through college or married. Some were just plain gone. No one from his old high school gang was around to welcome him home -- but that is what happens when you step out of time for two years. Trying to move forward as he restarted his civilian life, David met two women, one from the past and one from the present. Kathy Simmons was smart, beautiful and familiar. Having grown up together in North Florida, David had known Kathy for 10 years, and he was comfortable with her. But Kathy was hiding something. What was her secret? Could he love her enough to overcome her troublesome mystery?
Jennifer Swanson was a tough, pretty, farm girl from Wyoming. After serving with Jennifer's twin brother, Kenneth, in Vietnam, David traveled to Wyoming to retrieve an old airplane he bought from Kenneth. During this happenstance meeting with Jennifer, David learns that she and her mother desperately need help. Should David stay in Wyoming and help Jennifer, or should he go back to North Florida and work things out with Kathy? What do you do when you have to choose between love and responsibility?
David Paramore
David Paramore is a retired Construction Engineer who lives and writes in Perry Florida. David is a Private Pilot, An Elk, A Mason and a member of the Shriners.
David was drafted into the Army in 1967 and served a year with the 1st of the 8th Calvary, 1st Calvary Division, in Vietnam as an infantry man during some of the bloodiest fighting of the Vietnam War. Including the battle for Khe Sahn in early 1968.
David has a grown daughter and a grandson and currently spends his time writing, fishing, riding his motorcycle and supporting a non-profit organization of which he is a board member.
David has also published a book series called: "Black Hand Justice: The Incident at Rawhide Creek (A Walt Johnson Western - Book 1)".


Giving Back To The Community
Point of Grace Christian School in Perry FL. is currently trying to expand. We have the property, and now we need more classrooms. 100% of the proceeds from the book sales on Amazon go to help build new classrooms at Point of Grace Christian School.
Perry News Herald/TaCo Times has started printing a series from a novel by David Paramore. The Pacer, An American Story, was first published in our local newspaper before being made available on Amazon as a Kindle download and as a paperback.
HELP US GET THE WORD OUT
Tell everyone you meet to buy the book! Spread the word on Face Book! 100% of the proceeds from the book sales on Amazon will go to support the construction of the new school buildings at Point of Grace.
YOU WILL LIKE THE BOOK!

Black Hand Justice: The Incident at Rawhide Creek (A Walt Johnson Western)
by David Paramore
Synopsis:
In the fall of 1915 at a southeast Wyoming hunting lodge, the crooked Mayor of Chicago Illinois met an equally-crooked attorney. The two cooked up a scheme to bring the Black Hand gang to rural Wyoming. The Chicago Black Hands devised a plan and after establishing a front company, they bought a working cattle ranch in southeast Wyoming and manned it with the worst of their Chicago thugs and enforcers in an attempt to place them out of reach of the Illinois authorities. The gang brought their brand of “Black Hand justice” to the cattle industry of the rural stateside, stealing cattle from local ranchers and taking a crowbar to anyone who stood in their way.
Special deputies Walt Johnson and John White-Cloud were tasked with ridding the area of the Black Hands and recovering the stolen cattle and horses once and for all!
When Black Hand leader Anthony Rolfo sent his henchmen after the families of Walt and John, he didn’t consider the pioneer spirit ever-so prevalent in these Wyoming farmers and ranchers. The local ranchers and farmers, filled with the fighting spirit of their fathers and grandfathers, proved to be more than a match for a group of city boys.