When the Missouri Ran Red
A Novel of the Civil War
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Set in the final devastating months of the American Civil War, this powerhouse of a novel from award-winning author Jim R. Woolard follows one man’s harrowing journey from Confederate captive to Union prisoner to unchained force of vengeance . . .
Autumn, 1864. Rebel bushwhackers have seized and looted a small town in Missouri. Wounded and left for dead by his half-brother, seventeen-year-old Owen Wainwright is captured and conscripted by the Confederate Army. As the troops’ blacksmith, he witnesses the horrors of war firsthand: the savagery of General Selby’s Iron Brigade, the massacres of Union troops, the bloody battles at Lexington, Westport, and Mine Creek. Against all odds, Owen survives with the help of an unlikely ally—a new friend in arms and the only person he trusts. But if fate is cruel, war can be crueler . . .
Caught in the crossfire of a deadly Yankee ambush, Owen is arrested and jailed in a Union prison. Beaten and brutalized by guards, he begins to give up hope—until a U.S. marshal comes to him with an unusual offer. Owen’s traitorous half-brother is wanted for murder. If Owen agrees to help the U.S. marshal infiltrate the Texas winter camp of Confederate guerillas—and bring his half-brother to justice—Owen will have both his freedom and his revenge. But the risks are great. The price of getting caught is death.
Filled with raw human drama, blistering battle scenes, and vivid historical details, When the Missouri Ran Red is destined to be a classic in the field and a treasure for Civil War buffs.
Customer Reviews
Meh
I really, really wanted to love this book. I’m a huge fan of historical fiction, and a book set in my home state with towns I’ve heard of? I thought I’d love it.
I didn’t. The plot makes almost no sense. He’s a Confederate “Prisoner of War,” except, is he? When a confederate officer says “Will you come with me?” and you don’t even try to say no OR escape, are you really a POW?
The characters felt underdeveloped. All the big “action” moments were over in a second, rendering the build up unnecessary. Even the big battles weren’t really there.
I wanted to love this book, but it just wasn’t it for me.