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Brian Haig
Brian Haig is the son of former US Secretary of State Alexander Haig and has been born and bred in the American military and worked all over the globe. Since retiring from duty he has been a special advisor to the Joint Chiefs of Staff and now runs a large helicopter company. He lives with his... show more

Brian Haig is the son of former US Secretary of State Alexander Haig and has been born and bred in the American military and worked all over the globe. Since retiring from duty he has been a special advisor to the Joint Chiefs of Staff and now runs a large helicopter company. He lives with his wife and four children.
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Birth date: 01-01-1953
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Community Reviews
Bloggabook
Bloggabook rated it 12 years ago
This was the first book in this series that I read and I went into it not knowing anything about it. I really like the main character, he is such a smart ass, but he is usually one step ahead of everyone else. He's not a big, tough, macho military guy and that's another thing I like about him. Al...
GizmosReviews
GizmosReviews rated it 14 years ago
Dispatched to investigate the suicide of one of DC's most influential defense officials--an ardent, early supporter of the war in Iraq--Drummond and his female partner find themselves in the middle of a tug-of-war between Washington's most influential power brokers and his own personal allegiance to...
GizmosReviews
GizmosReviews rated it 14 years ago
In his heart of hearts, Sean Drummond knows that he doesn't have a devil's prayer of saving General William Morrison. If even a fraction of the charges against the much-decorated military man are proven, Morrison will be executed as the worst traitor in American history. But a plea from Morrison's w...
Silverjump
Silverjump rated it 14 years ago
Brian Haig's legal-military Drummond series are among my favorite books, but the plot in this latest book really seemed forced. Premise was good, but the characters weren't developed, and the plot really didn't mesh (at least it seemed so to me).
GizmosReviews
GizmosReviews rated it 14 years ago
In 1987, Alex Konevitch was thrown out of MoscowUniversity for "indulging his entrepreneurial spirit." But by 1991, he was worth $300 million. On track to become Russia's wealthiest man, he makes one critical mistake: he hires the former deputy director of the KGB to handle his corporate security. A...
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