The Energy Caper, or Nixon in the Sky with Diamonds

The Sixties Generation, #1

Fiction & Literature, Humorous
Cover of the book The Energy Caper, or Nixon in the Sky with Diamonds by William Scott Morrison, Castalia Communications
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: William Scott Morrison ISBN: 9780929150284
Publisher: Castalia Communications Publication: June 1, 2008
Imprint: Language: English
Author: William Scott Morrison
ISBN: 9780929150284
Publisher: Castalia Communications
Publication: June 1, 2008
Imprint:
Language: English

The Energy Caper, or Nixon in the Sky with Diamonds takes you on a merry romp with a band of idealistic twenty-somethings looking for love and hoping to change the world in an luckier universe in which the Kennedys were not assassinated and the Vietnam War ended before it began. Joining in the fun are President Richard Nixon and Dr. Timothy Leary, the escaped convict Nixon calls "the most dangerous man in the world" for turning America's youth into no-good hippies. Nixon is the same profane, venal S-O-B that made him such a hit in our universe, but here he is unleashed in a world where there was no Vietnam war to slow him down and Watergate is just a fancy hotel. Elected on a pledge to wage an unrelenting "war on drugs," Nixon instead confronts a different kind of war an energy war. The Arab oil embargo is driving the country toward a second Great Depression as motorists line up for hours to buy gasoline at any price. Desperate for alternatives to oil, Nixon learns of a plant which produces three times more biomass per acre than corn. If it were grown for methanol, good old wood alcohol the same fuel used in Indianapolis racing cars ­America could farm its way to energy independence in just five short years. A secret weapon has dropped in Nixon's lap, but he is shocked to learn that, under another name, the secret weapon which could defeat the oil cartel is a primary target of his War on Drugs. If he can lead America to energy independence by convincing conservatives to legalize cultivation of the plant Thomas Jefferson called "America's most valuable crop" in the name of national security, the final spot on Mount Rushmore will be his. Nixon knows that only a law-and-order, hippie-bashing conservative like himself could hope to buck America's richest families and most powerful corporations to pull off a caper this crazy.

Series: The Sixties Generation

Volume One

408 pages

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The Energy Caper, or Nixon in the Sky with Diamonds takes you on a merry romp with a band of idealistic twenty-somethings looking for love and hoping to change the world in an luckier universe in which the Kennedys were not assassinated and the Vietnam War ended before it began. Joining in the fun are President Richard Nixon and Dr. Timothy Leary, the escaped convict Nixon calls "the most dangerous man in the world" for turning America's youth into no-good hippies. Nixon is the same profane, venal S-O-B that made him such a hit in our universe, but here he is unleashed in a world where there was no Vietnam war to slow him down and Watergate is just a fancy hotel. Elected on a pledge to wage an unrelenting "war on drugs," Nixon instead confronts a different kind of war an energy war. The Arab oil embargo is driving the country toward a second Great Depression as motorists line up for hours to buy gasoline at any price. Desperate for alternatives to oil, Nixon learns of a plant which produces three times more biomass per acre than corn. If it were grown for methanol, good old wood alcohol the same fuel used in Indianapolis racing cars ­America could farm its way to energy independence in just five short years. A secret weapon has dropped in Nixon's lap, but he is shocked to learn that, under another name, the secret weapon which could defeat the oil cartel is a primary target of his War on Drugs. If he can lead America to energy independence by convincing conservatives to legalize cultivation of the plant Thomas Jefferson called "America's most valuable crop" in the name of national security, the final spot on Mount Rushmore will be his. Nixon knows that only a law-and-order, hippie-bashing conservative like himself could hope to buck America's richest families and most powerful corporations to pull off a caper this crazy.

Series: The Sixties Generation

Volume One

408 pages

More books from Humorous

Cover of the book The Boys of '58 by William Scott Morrison
Cover of the book Eastman Was Here by William Scott Morrison
Cover of the book Another Modest Proposal by William Scott Morrison
Cover of the book Pretty Much Just One Shade of Brown (Part 1) by William Scott Morrison
Cover of the book ...Just South of Heaven by William Scott Morrison
Cover of the book Einkaufsberatung by William Scott Morrison
Cover of the book The Good Husband of Zebra Drive by William Scott Morrison
Cover of the book Pack Nuevos Autores Ahorra al Comprar 2 by William Scott Morrison
Cover of the book Making A Splash (Book 8 - Once Upon A Romance Series) by William Scott Morrison
Cover of the book Getting It by William Scott Morrison
Cover of the book Shut the Fuck Up!: Every Man’s Key to Happiness by William Scott Morrison
Cover of the book Der Liebhaber meiner Mutter geht in Pension by William Scott Morrison
Cover of the book Spoiled Brats by William Scott Morrison
Cover of the book The Knitting Circle Rapist Annihilation Squad by William Scott Morrison
Cover of the book Amazed by You by William Scott Morrison
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy