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Total Brag - My Second Novel Has Just Been Published
Booklocker.com ^
| 12/1/10
| carton2531
Posted on 12/01/2010 9:44:21 AM PST by carton253
Just in time for Christmas
LET US FIGHT IT OUT
Has been released!
Brief Synoposis
The saga shifts west as General James Longstreet assumes command of the Department of Mississippi. His mission: stop the fall of Vicksburg and prevent the Confederacy from being split in two. His opponent is none other than his old friend, Ulysses S. Grant. But when President Lincoln summons Grant east to assume command of the Union war effort, a new and dangerous nemesis arises in his place. Sherman! Now Longstreet must gather all the fighting men he can in order to prevent Sherman from reaching his goal - Atlanta, by summer's end.
Let Us Fight It Out is the second book of a trilogy that provides the exciting answer to the Civil War's most enduring question: What if Stonewall Jackson had survived Chancellorsville?
Just had to brag!
TOPICS: Books/Literature; History; Military/Veterans
KEYWORDS: civilwar; jameslongstreet; stonewalljackson; williamsherman
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To: Democrat_media
You are a Southerner who is for freedom above all else. Got it!
121
posted on
12/03/2010 7:05:43 AM PST
by
carton253
(Ask me about The Stainless Banner - a free e-zine dedicated to the armies of the Confederacy.)
To: carton253
122
posted on
12/03/2010 7:30:11 AM PST
by
mojitojoe
(In itÂ’s 1600 years of existence, Islam has 2 main accomplishments, psychotic violence and goat curr)
To: Non-Sequitur; carton253
Yes, of course. Where are my manners?
Congratulations on what must have been a labor of love (and certainly no small feat). Best of luck in the sale of your book.
123
posted on
12/03/2010 8:23:17 AM PST
by
rockrr
(Everything is different now...)
To: Bubba Ho-Tep
[
Achilles2000]
If Jackson had survived, the first thing that would have happened would have been a victory at Gettysburg. Unlike Early, Jackson would have immediately occupied the high ground, and the battle would have been a replay of Marye’s Heights. And if that had happened, Gettysburg would have been another minor battle of the campaign. The US Army would have found better ground, maybe at Pipe Creek, where they'd already surveyed defensive positions. Lee was going to have to attack at some point--the US Army was between him and Virginia.
How do you figure that?
One of George Meade's strategic objectives was to stay between Lee and D.C. ... and Longstreet's advice to Lee was precisely to use flank marches (like the Japanese used against the British in Malaya so effectively) to force Meade back or, better, to force him to attack.
I don't think any of Meade's divisions managed to get between Lee and the Potomac crossings.
To: Non-Sequitur
That and to keep Davis from spliting the army up and sending part in a fruitless attempt at saving Vicksburg. New one on me but entirely credible. Edward Bonekemper asserts (and backs it up) that Lee's home-state devotion made him a ferocious competitor for resources with Bragg's Army of Tennessee (and may have doomed it, he suggests).
To: lentulusgracchus
126
posted on
12/07/2010 12:21:55 AM PST
by
Liberty Valance
(Keep a simple manner for a happy life :o)
To: lentulusgracchus
New one on me but entirely credible. Not new at all but one that has been documented by historians like Stephen Sears and Noah Andre Trudeau.
To: Non-Sequitur
128
posted on
12/07/2010 6:57:01 PM PST
by
Who is John Galt?
("Sometimes I have to break the law in order to meet my management objectives." - Bill Calkins, BLM)
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