ACCIDENTAL HERO: The Misguided Career of Ranger ChenHe's the worst park ranger in history. He's also saved 1,250 lives. This is not a coincidence.Marcus "Lucky" Chen can't read maps, installs signs backward, and once tranquilized a moose instead of an elk. On his first day at Pinecrest State Park, he locked his keys in his truck, triggered a screaming trash container malfunction, and got lost in the parking lot. He also saved a family from bears.And that was just Day One.Follow Lucky's hilarious first year as he: - Discovers a priceless shipwreck (by crashing into it with the Governor aboard)- Breaks up a poaching ring (by pointing a wildlife camera the wrong way)- Revolutionizes wildlife management (by measuring a fence incorrectly)- Prevents a mountain lion attack (through "tactical moose deployment")- Saves dozens from a gas leak (by failing to change a lightbulb)But Lucky's "luck" isn't random. Mysterious symbols appear before each disaster. A suspiciously intelligent raccoon seems to predict every crisis. And a guardian in the shadows has been turning Lucky's chaos into cosmic salvation for reasons that stretch back generations.READERS LOVE LUCKY: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ "I'm a park ranger. This is documentary accurate. We all know a Lucky."⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ "Like Parks and Recreation meets Final Destination, but everyone lives!"⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ "The tactical moose deployment scene alone is worth the price."Perfect for fans of: Carl Hiaasen, Christopher Moore, Fredrik Backman, and anyone who's ever felt like a disaster but suspected they might be exactly where they need to be.A HILARIOUS ADVENTURE ABOUT: ✓ Finding purpose in your imperfections✓ Discovering failure might be your superpower✓ Learning that the universe needs people who can't do anything right✓ Understanding that mistakes aren't interruptions - they're the journeyThis isn't just comedy - it's a surprisingly touching meditation on failure, purpose, and the possibility that your worst qualities might be your most important ones. Lucky Chen proves that sometimes the best way to save the world is to be completely, consistently, miraculously bad at your job.WARNING: Contains excessive incompetence, a raccoon with an agenda, and dangerous levels of hope for failures everywhere."I meant to write a different book, but I kept making mistakes. This came out instead. Lucky would approve." - The AuthorJoin other readers who've discovered that the best way forward is backward, upside-down, and completely wrong.