Showing posts with label historical fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label historical fiction. Show all posts

The Struggle for Apacheria (Eyewitnesses to the Indian Wars, 1865-1890) Review

The Struggle for Apacheria (Eyewitnesses to the Indian Wars, 1865-1890)
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This marvelous book can safely be said to be the last word on the Apache Wars. The breadth and scope of the original accounts presented here - most drawn from obscure 19th Century sources - is remarkable. There are newspaper interviews with General George Crook, an account of the Chiricahua Apaches in captivity by Walter Reed (for whom Walter Reed Hospital is named), a visit with Cochise in his mountain stronghold by the teritorial governor of Arizona, and many, many more "you are there" accounts. Cozzens opens the work with an excellent historical overview of the Apache Wars. Indispensable to the Indian Wars affecionado!

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Patterned after the classic "Battles and Leaders of the Civil War", this series of five volumes will be the most comprehensive work on the military aspects of the Indian Wars in the West. The author will gather a wide variety of first-person accounts that are not generally available elsewhere, relying primarily on unpublished manuscript accounts and contemporaneous newspaper articles. Each article covering an event or battle will be placed within its context, with background information on the author of the article, a historical introduction evaluating the article's accuracy and significance, and a "for further reading" list of sources.

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Fearless: A Novel of Sarah Bowman Review

Fearless: A Novel of Sarah Bowman
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If you think your life is hard, just wait till you read this book by Lucia St. Clair Robson ~~ it is so vividly written that I can't believe I didn't rush to the store to buy it after finishing Ride the Wind!!
Sarah Bowman is not your typical heroine nor is she your stereotypical woman. She is fearless ~~ takes no mess from any man nor woman. She rides with the army boys deep into Mexico to fight in the Mexican war. After her husband was killed, she stayed with the army knowing no other life. She started out as a laundress as she had done in the Florida Seminole wars. However, as a favor to an old friend, she started to be the officers' cook and laundress ~~ and was well rewarded with her efforts.
Through lovers, death and victory, Sarah remains with her intergrity as a human being intact. She defends the helpless every chance she can get. She has a bawdy sense of humor ~~ the officers' wives can't help but look at her with disdain. She shows a gentle side of her when needed ~~ she is a remarkable woman in every sense of the word!!
This is a brillantly written book. You won't be disappointed there with Robeson's writing. She writes so vividly that you think you better get a drink of water before the scorching Texas sun kills you. She also writes of a different Texas than the one that the Comanches ruled. It is just a fine story ~~ and it's a quick read. You can't help but be drawn into the story. And you can't help but admire Sarah and wish she was still around. But Texas and Mexico has claimed her as theirs.

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Wolves at Our Door Review

Wolves at Our Door
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This is a real Western, the kind movies are made of with stars like Paul Newman or Lee Marvin who, by the way, acted in the movie Pocket Money made from Brown's earlier book Jim Kane. Wolves at Our Door is a strong, fast paced, tough story of cowboys today living in a cowman's world surrounded by the real dangers of drug wars on both sides of the US Mexico border. Characters from Jim Kane and The Forests of the Night continue in this new book in a tough and thrilling story. In my mind I can see Clint Eastwood playing the lead in a movie version of this book. It is a better story than Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian: Or the Evening Redness in the West (Modern Library) or All the Pretty Horses.

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Along the border of southern Arizona and northern Mexico, a close-knit group of Anglo and Hispanic families struggle to keep their ranches alive amidst the depredations of drug lords and smugglers. Here, age-old values collide with gangs of hardened border criminals in a raw tale of action, adventure, and justice.
J. P. S. Brown opens a window onto a part of the world that few have seen and even fewer have understood, offering a view of the world of cattle ranching in an area where homes are still without electricity or plumbing, where ranches are reachable only by plane or horseback, and where neighbors are family or deadly foes.

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Missy: A Novel Review

Missy: A Novel
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I enjoyed the book a lot. I guess it was a historical novel, but it was also a study of the world of drug addiction. Here are some of my miscellaneous thoughts about the book:
1. Many books are great along the way and it's not the destination that is so good, but the journey getting there. I would say that the destination in this book, where our main 19 year old opium addicted call girl realizes finally, that her whole existence and actions were seriously tainted by her addiction, was the thing that makes the book work so well. I knew that her actions were tainted by drugs along the way, but the final chapters somehow made the whole book more relevant and topical and good to me as this revelation comes to her.
2. The historical parts were excellent. The descriptions of the reactions to different murders, how the "law" operated, the tolerance for bad behavior, good men seeing call girls, good women being "flashers", and just how ribald the times really were in these mining towns, were insightful and seemed correct. Almost laughable and somehow endearing compared to today.
3. I loved the relationship Dol has with each of the other flashgirls. There is a "Sex in the City" element here that was very enjoyable and sometimes touching.
4. Dol, our narrator, is a hilarious and very intelligent girl with her insights into human behavior and comments about living the sober life away from the all night drug enhanced parties she is part of. Made me wonder if I've been too sober myself.
5. The grittiness of travel with handcarts, covered wagons through mud and muck, up huge mountain ranges in the desert was well done. In a way, it didn't fit in with the light natured life they lived otherwise, but it added to the believability of the book.
6. Dol's relationship with her mother was very interesting and insightful. We want things to be different for both of them, but it was a huge struggle for Dol and obviously for the mother. There was no sugar coating to be found in the book.
I gave the book 3 stars instead of 4 because I felt the plot sometimes moved along too slowly with some of the main themes being repeated over and over again. And yet, as I re-read my own review, I think if you read the book, you will find a lot of great and rewarding stuff.

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Generation Of Warriors Review

Generation Of Warriors
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This is a well researched book that goes behind the scenes of a major civil war battle. The author describes the effect of war from the commanding general to the common soldier as well as the hardships faced by the local civilians. He doesn't stray from the actual events of the "Battle of Chickamauga' and gives a detail account of the action that took place. I thoroughly enjoyed the interweaving from the battlefield to the homestead and all that takes place with the main characters. I would characterize this book as a historical novel and highly recommended reading. With the recent interest in historical movies I believe this book would make a fine movie as well, along the lines of 'Cold Mountain' and 'Gods And Generals'

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Aztec Fire Review

Aztec Fire
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After having read Aztec Rage I was pumped to read this next installment in the series. While it had a good beginning, once the plot was taken overseas, the author's just seemed to cram too many underdeveloped stories into the trip inorder to take our character around the world. Each new region encountered should have made many great books. However, the book would have been better served if the author's would have skipped all those adventures (for later said books) and if they would have given us more about the war in the New World. While I expected much more, it was still a fun read.

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Shavetail: A Novel Review

Shavetail: A Novel
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OK, first things first. Ignore the review that claims there is something mystical/Cormac McCarthy about this book. Admit it, McCarthy can be daunting and hard work to read. Think Lonesome Dove, not Blood Meridian. Cobb's characters come to life immediately. He tells their stories in alternating chapters. He also inserts the diary of another central character, a kidnapped settler, that I feared would grow cloying, but didn't. How he resolves her situation initially seemed abrupt, but the more I thought about it, I realized it was the correct resolution. Cobb obviously has done his research. The book reeks of authenticity (and reeks is the right word when you consider his descriptions of life in an Arizona Army outpost in 1871). Oh yeah, did I forget to mention, Shavetail is a lot of fun to read. This is the best Western I've read since Lonesome Dove and up there with my all-time favorite, Welcome to Hard Times. Buy it. Read it. Enjoy.

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Ghost Warrior Review

Ghost Warrior
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I didn't know what to expect when I picked up a copy of GHOST WARRIOR for I had never read any of Lucia Robson's novels. I have a love for Native American and western history, so I thought it was worth a try. I finished the book about a week later, and was simply amazed at what I had read. I thought the book was very well written and was a compelling story that grabbed my attention at the very beginning and has held it ever since.
Ms. Robson's book made a significant impression on me. It inspired me to spend the next several months reading Apache Indian history. I didn't realize how good the book was until I really understood how much research the author had done to be able to tell this story with so much passion, detailed knowledge and competence. The book followed the history of the Apache Indian wars accurately, but it also gave me insight into what her Native American, and American characters must have been like beyond the historical facts. I had to keep reminding myself that her book was a novel, and by definition novels distort history. But I found her depiction of history was in many cases more accurate than some of the histories I have read, and it was exciting, sad, outrageous, fun, and gives a profile in American history that deserves wide attention.
Ms. Robson tells a complex tale that centered around Lozen, an Apache warrior and Shaman of the Chiricahua Apache band. The complexity of the story increases as her novel follows Lozen's long life as a warrior. The Apaches struggled for survival against western expansion pre and post civil war, against the ever present Mexican army, other hostile indians, the invading gold rush and it's inherent lawlessness and the best troops the US Army could deliver.
Lozen, the main character, was one of the only Apache warriors, male or female, to fight with all of the great Apache Chiefs over a 30 year period right up to their final battles. Their mission was survival of their race.
GHOST WARRIOR is an ambitious work, and I not only recommend it to family and friends, I rave about it. I've noticed that Ms Robson's best selling work makes noticeable improvements with each new book. I'm looking forward to her next book; it can't come out soon enough!
A reader in Arlington, VA

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The Perilous Road Review

The Perilous Road
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I read the book The Perilous Road by William O. Steele. If you like exciting books you should read this one. I really don't like to read but this book I really enjoyed reading. The story takes place during the Civil War. Chris Brabson hates the union troops for many reasons. He tries ro get them back for stealing their food through a variety of ways.

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A Sweetness to the Soul (Dreamcatcher Series #1) Review

A Sweetness to the Soul (Dreamcatcher Series #1)
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Living in Oregon and loving it, I was finally able to connect with the true spirit and life of early Oregon. Jane Kirkpatrick brings this story to the very core of my soul. I actually felt like I was there in the Deschutes with Jane Shearer and the Warm Spring tribe she shared her life with and to the amazing feats that her husband,Joesph,set in the early west. The stama of the early pioneers to have trials, tribulations and yet strong faith to make the West the best of living. Once I started this book, I couldn't put it down. It definetley was not a slow read for me. This part of Oregon is on my list to visit, though, it won't look the same, I'm sure that I will feel the spirit of all the characters gathered in that valley. After reading this book, I could not stop. Next came All Together In One Place, and A Gathering of Finches. I am just now starting Love to Water My Soul..I hope that Jane Kirkpatrick keeps the "sweetness" of her writing coming and coming..I love historical fiction of this kind.

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Based on historical characters and events, A Sweetness to the Soul recounts the captivating story of young, spirited Oregon pioneer Jane Herbert who at the age of twelve faces a tragedy that begins a life-long search for forgiveness and love. In the years that follow, young Jane finds herself involved in an unusual and touching romance with a dreamer sixteen years her senior, struggles to make peace with an emotionally distant mother, and fights to build a family of her own. Filled with heart-warming insight and glimpses of real-life pain, A Sweetness to the Soul paints a brilliant picture of love that conquers all obstacles and offers a powerful testimony to the miracle of God's healing power.

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Canawlers: A Novel of the C&O Canal Review

Canawlers: A Novel of the CandO Canal
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The Canawlers is an excellent introduction to life on the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal and the effects of the Civil War on it. It is suitable for junior high through adult readers. Those who live near or are familiar with the canal from Washington, DC, to Cumberland, MD, will be especially interested.
The book is set from March to November, 1863, and is the tale of a family owned boat plying the canal. It includes family life, courting, war, rape, spying, mule care, murder, bar fights, arson, mischief, hunting, prostitution, the Battle of Antietam, wound nursing, business operation, beatings, operation of the underground railroad and gun and knife fights.

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Josanie's War: A Chiricahua Apache Novel (American Indian Literature and Critical Studies Series) Review

Josanie's War: A Chiricahua Apache Novel (American Indian Literature and Critical Studies Series)
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Josanies's War is one of the best novels I've ever read on the final Chiricahua outbreak of 1885 under Geronimo, Naiche and band leaders like Josanie. The author appears to know the country very well and blends history and fiction together in way I've rarely seen. Chiricahua Apache beliefs are handled well and with respect and these people come alive as living, breathing human beings. The narrative moves swiftly and being Apache I see many of the places described in the novel clearly. There are one or two mistakes but they are minor and the average reader would never catch them so I won't dwell on these. A joy to read and part of my permanent collection of great novels on tribal American people.

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Snowbound Review

Snowbound
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Author Richard S. Wheeler's book, SNOWBOUND, set in 1848-49. is the story of John C. Fremont's ill-fated Fourth Expedition to the western territories of America. Using the voices of members of his company of travelers, Wheeler presents the journey of some 100 men and 150 mules and half a dozen horses to trace the expedition's footsteps from Washington City to California allegedly to conduct scientific research, to prepare topographical maps, and to choose a route for a railroad to cross the continent, in particular the western mountains.
Wheeler has chosen a cross section of company members to report the progress of the journey. Their various points of view offer a great vehicle to inform the reader of an exploration which for its length and duration could otherwise become tedious reading. In addition, Fremont, often known as "Pathfinder" (for his self-flattering reports of previous explorations), is not a simple character to define.
A man proven to be devious, wholly self-interested and defiant of authority, Fremont had been court martialed and ejected from the military, but continues to use his former title. In the meantime, when "Colonel" Fremont was unable to ingratiate himself into the family of powerful Missouri Senator Benton, he eloped with his daughter, Jessie. The expedition group that leaves from Missouri is composed of Fremont's former exploring company and new men who join the company for the half-hearted "promise" of pay upon return. While such arrangements may seem strange to us today, it was not unusual for footloose men of the first half of the nineteenth century to join such loosely gathered parties under such conditions if only to "see the elephant," an adventurous lark. What we readers get from the eyes of these many observers is their leader's total disregard and lack of concern for the safety of his men and animals.
In order to identify the informants and their contributions, Author Wheeler used their names for chapter headings. Oddly enough, Fremont's former fellow travelers were fairly tight-lipped about their leader and never questioned his decisions. From the others, we learn of the monolithic decision-making of Fremont, his frequently stupid choices and stubborn refusal to change even the most disastrous mistakes. In those instances we observe Fremont's canny pursuit of scapegoats to hold responsible for his errors. Another aspect of the man is his foolhardy mismanagement of finances. John Fremont always lived with the "wolf at his door," spent much of his time calculating financial gain, and when it came, made terrible investments and squandered the proceeds.
Unquestionably, the most exciting (and agonizing) piece of this work, is the expedition's trek (against all advice) over the mountains in the cruelest months, during storms of the bitterest cold and the most snow and ice in anyone's memory. Fremont had been directed to an experienced guide whose advice he both ignored and deliberately rejected (and subsequently blamed for the tragedies that followed). Furthermore, although it was apparent early-on that the old man had been correct, Fremont refuses to change course.
The last third of the book, told from the informants (including Fremont himself) tells of the incredible horrors they faced. Divided into small "mess" groups, spread out along the trail, ten died of starvation and cold, others lost limbs from frostbite, still more straggled behind crawling on their knees, their frozen feet half-wrapped in bits of blankets for they had eaten their boots. These small groups tried to save one another while their leader rode ahead on horseback apparently with ample food, and left them to drag the company's machinery and packs which had been deserted when the company mules died. With ample food and horses, although not entirely unscathed, Fremont arrived at the first town off the mountains in considerably better condition that the men he'd deserted. True to his nature, the "Colonel" left it to the local townsmen to return to the trails to rescue his men.
For readers seriously interested in American History, Richard S. Wheeler offers a fascinating read. While the book is fascinating, particularly for its focus upon a highly controversial leader, the author leaves unexamined the psychological underpinnings that have or could have created the parts of him that were truly monstrous. We must be mindful, too, that the Donner Party, a similar disaster, occurred in 1846, and was given wide newspaper publicity. Surely Fremont and others must have known of it before they left Missouri.
Less clear to me is the quality of the book as a novel. The presentation is kept lively by the number of informants. In that light, SNOWBOUND may best be considered creative non-fiction because somehow the author doesn't quite deliver the "guts" of a novel, the internal emotional turmoil that must have twisted this perverse protagonist and his loyal followers.



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Last Train from Cuernavaca Review

Last Train from Cuernavaca
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This was so good I stayed up late to read it. The characters were inviting and I related to them all. Well researched and well done! Great read! Make sure you put it at the TOP of your Summer reading list!

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In the Christmas season of 1913, Grace Knight's elegant old hotel on Cuernavaca's main plaza is the place to see and be seen. Mexico's landed aristocracy, members of the foreign community, wealthy tourists, and young army officerswith their wives flock to the Colonial. Under the ballroom's hundreds of twinkling electric lights, they dance to old Spanish tunes and to the new beat of ragtime.Outside the city, in the shadows of the valley's two volcanoes, a company of federal soldiers raids the hacienda of Don Miguel Sanche, hunting for men sympathetic to the cause of the charismatic rebel leader, Emiliano Zapata. In a hailstorm of rifle fire, sixteen-year-old Angela Sanchez's life takes a horrifying turn. After the soldiers leave, she returns to the ruins of her family's home. She collects her father's old Winchester carbine, gathers the survivors among his workers, and rides off in search of Zapata's Liberating Army of the South.Last Train from Cuernavaca is the story of two strong andambitious women. For the sake of love, honor, and survival, they become swept up in a Revolution that almost destroys them and their country.

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The Curse of Satan's Collar Review

The Curse of Satan's Collar
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The Curse of Satan's Collar
This is a wonderful book written in mountian delect when you open it and start reading it you are imediately impressed with the story .
The story starts with the Revolutionary war and a family member getting hung for stealing King Gold.
It talks about a young man going off to war and coming back with a drinking problem .
This mother loved her son a lot to do this she tied him to a tree to sober him up it worked what a story what a book .
The neighbors thought she was wierd but he got he's life back this book is wonderful entertaining in places and funny in others sad .

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Home Is Beyond the Mountains Review

Home Is Beyond the Mountains
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Celia Barker Lottridge's novel, Home is Beyond the Mountains, tells the story of Samira and her family who must leave their village in 1918 because of the war that is happening around them. While on their journey to safety Samira and her mother are separated from the rest of her family, and by the time they reach a home for refugees, only Samira is still alive. She is excited to find her older brother Benjamin who has made it there as well, but who must tell her that their father is no longer living, either. The two children spend several years in an orphanage with many other children who have been affected by the Turks attacking their people. At the orphanage they are taken care of by Susan Shedd, an amazing woman who has the goal of helping these children return to their villages in what will be a long and arduous journey.
While this book is a novel, it felt like a true story to me. Much of it is based on facts, and Lottridge's own aunt, Susan Shedd, is a central character in this novel. Much of this story is based on recollections Lottridge collected from her aunt about this period in time and her role in history.
As the orphans make their way home, organized in small units that work as a family, they are forced to determine where "home" really is and what constitutes a family.
This was an amazing book, full of suspense as I waited and hoped for these children to find happiness and family when they returned home. The struggles Samira and Benjamin went through nearly a hundred years ago are still challenges faced by many countries at war with displaced families and children.
Although I did not know anything about the Turkish invasion of Persia, Lottridge was able to write about this time period in such a way that previous knowledge was not a necessity.
This is a hopeful story, highly recommended for YA readers or history lovers.


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The Secret Mission of Thomas Jefferson Beale: Intrigue and Hidden Treasure -- With Beale Code 3 Solved Review

The Secret Mission of Thomas Jefferson Beale: Intrigue and Hidden Treasure -- With Beale Code 3 Solved
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This books creative approach makes it feel at times as if you are living through Thomas Jefferson Beale's eyes. The amazing detail, accurate time period descriptions and clearly stated corrected historical points are proof of Mr. Hinsons immense amount of research to prove there is a treasure hidden. I can see college courses developed around this book and cryptologists studying his findings for years to come. Great read and unique approach that makes you keep coming back for more. Highly recommend!

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AHidden Treasure WithTwo Centuries ofMystery ...Who was Thomas Jefferson Beale? He was a man of mystery, a born leader, an adventurer - and the love child of President Thomas Jefferson and his slave mistress, Sally Hemings. The Secret Mission of Thomas Jefferson Beale is a unique combination of fact and fiction, in which the author recreates Beale's world, in order to set the stage for his exciting revelations about the legend of Beale's buried treasure. After twenty-five years of research, author Larry Hinson has cracked the legendary Beale Code 3, which gives the names of the twenty-nine men who rode west with Beale in 1817, and never returned to collect the cache of gold, silver, and jewels still hidden in Montvale, Virginia. Providing fascinating reading to historians, treasure-seekers, and anyone who loves intrigue and adventure, The Secret Mission of Thomas Jefferson Beale boldly speculates about Beale's real motivation, the circumstances of his life, and the important mission he may have been entrusted with by his father, President Thomas Jefferson. Larry Hinson is a native of Monroe, North Carolina. The son of a harness maker, he's an ex-Marine with BS and JD degrees from the University of North Carolina. He is currently working on the sequel to The Secret Mission of Thomas Jefferson Beale.

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