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The Battle of Milroy Station: A Novel of the Nature of True Courage
 
 
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The Battle of Milroy Station: A Novel of the Nature of True Courage [Hardcover]

Robert H. Fowler (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

February 1, 2003
What is the nature of true courage?

In March of 1896, Andrew Jackson Mundy, a senator from the Deep South, is secretly urged by Marc Hanna, the rich kingmaker, to become William McKinley's running mate in the upcoming presidential election. Hanna argues that Mundy, a reconstructed Southern Democrat and wounded Confederate veteran of the Civil War, running with McKinley, a Republican veteran of the Union Army, would help to heal the still festering wounds and head off threats posed by William Jennings Bryan.

Had Mundy jumped party lines and seized the opportunity, he, rather than Teddy Roosevelt, would have become President of the United States upon McKinley's assassination a few years later. Mundy had been tempted to accept Hanna's offer why did he refuse?

Thus begins a story that goes back to the War Between the States. At the beginning of the Civil War, before the death of hope, no one, least of all the naive, well-read Andrew Jackson Mundy, could foresee or understand the nature of the war they were to fight. Early on, Mundy comes under the spell of the immensely talented and ambitious Evan Martin. When Martin is given the command of a ragtag Confederate army sent to thwart a Federal invasion, Mundy is at first thrilled to be the aide-de-camp of his hero as Martin pulls the army together and wins victories with brilliant tactics. But then, Mundy becomes involved in an atrocity that forces him to consider the nature of true courage and honor. It is a dark, murderous infamy, and it will haunt Andrew Jackson Mundy until his dying day . . . and prevent him from accepting Marc Hanna's offer more than three decades later.

Through the experiences of Andrew Jackson Mundy, General Evan Martin, and dozens of other skillfully drawn, colorful characters, Robert H. Fowler provides the reader with fascinating insights into the tactics and strategy of Civil War battles, as well as the grim reality of the forced marches, the blood-torn bodies, the ear-splitting voice of massed artillery, the racket-rattle of musket volleys, the howling charges. It is a tale, at once forlorn and wonderful, of a war bravely fought and bitterly lost. In this brilliant and thrilling story, reminiscent of the novels of MacKinlay Kantor and Michael and Jeff Shaara, Fowler reveals the nature of true courage and brings a tumultuous chapter in American history to poignant life.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Civil War buffs will try in vain to find this battle in their encyclopedias, but they will discover the novel to be a graphically honest and poignant account of both the terrible fighting and the era itself, from the Southern point of view. The author, a novelist and historian, has devised an imaginary battle site in an unnamed Confederate state. Thirty years after the war, his modest and likable hero, Democratic congressman Jackson Mundy, has been asked by Ohio king-making politician Marcus Hanna to run for vice-president alongside Republican William McKinley. Despite party affiliation, Mundy is regarded as a liberal man and could carry many Southern votes, but after much thought, he is forced to reject the offer. His reasons for this action form the body of the book and have to do with details of the infamous battle that he has kept secret for a generation. As a young man, the club-footed Mundy was aide-de-camp to the charismatic Evan Martin, a West Pointer with dreams of military greatness. Although a Philadelphia native, Martin enlists in the Confederate cause with a commission and is soon a general, hoping to achieve victory and fame. Mundy, fascinated, believes the general is brilliant, failing to realize that he is also ruthless and self-aggrandizing. The battle scenes are genuine, fully realized by an author who not only knows the nature of this internecine war but is able to raise his characters, humble and mighty, above cliche.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Fowler, a prolific novelist and the founder of Civil War Times Illustrated, homes in on Andrew Jackson Mundy, who was urged to jump political parties in 1896 and be the vice-presidential running mate of William McKinley. Had he done so, he would have ascended to the presidency when McKinley was assassinated. But Mundy rejected the overture, and this compelling historical novel puts forth his reasons with a combination of narrative, letters, and personal recollections. In the course of his work for the War Department, Mundy is befriended by Evan Martin, an ambitious, glory-seeking West Point graduate. As Martin's star rises, Mundy is gladly swept along in his wake. It is at the Battle for Milroy Station that Martin crosses an ethical line. Yet Mundy never reveals Martin's transgressions until he pens these memoirs as an apology of sorts for turning down a much larger role in the history of the U.S. This is a carefully researched and well-written historical novel that examines the horrible choices soldiers must face in the course of battle. Wes Lukowsky
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Forge Books; 1st edition (February 1, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 076530659X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0765306593
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 5.8 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #8,543,756 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding, June 17, 2007
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this is a great novel about the American Civil War. Powerful and authentic, it deal with many issues that were present during the war. The characters are fully realized, and the situations gripping.

What is incomprehensible is how the publisher allowed it to sink without a trace. This could have been a big seller, if not a best-seller, and is the kind of book that should be taught in our schools.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
...In the early days of 1896, both the United States and my own Democratic Party had fallen into great difficulties. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
sawmill road, star forts, general shouted, mounted infantry, fellow clerks, gin house
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
General Martin, General Walther, Milroy Station, Captain Mundy, War Department, Milroy's Landing, General Wiggins, Yardley City, General Postlethwaite, General Bristoe, Mueller's Woods, Colonel Martin, Martha Jane, Colonel Turnbull, Evan Martin, Cousin Horace, Colonel Trasker, Croxton's Crossroads, President Davis, Jackson Mundy, West Point, Major Bolick, Sarah Martin, Major Ferebee, Yardley County
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