Flags of War: Shiloh 1862

Flags of War: Shiloh 1862 - Paperback

$18.70
Sale price  $18.70 Regular price 
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Flags of War: Shiloh 1862

Flags of War: Shiloh 1862 - Paperback

$18.70
Sale price  $18.70 Regular price 

Book Overview

by John Wilson (Author)

"...action-filled, tightly written prose. Realistic battle scenes illustrate the senselessness of war...the story offers a fresh take on the conflict - the idea of Canada as refuge for fugitive slaves and the irony of how it was nearly drawn into the war on the side of the South."- Albany Public Library, NY

Nate MacGregor knows he must fight for his Southern homeland in the coming Civil War, but for his cousin Walt in Canada West it's not so simple. Walt knows slavery's wrong but, as the tensions increase and war breaks out, the danger of Britain, and Canada, being sucked into the conflict on the side of the Confederacy increases. The two cousins are linked by Sunday, an escaped slave who is using the Underground Railroad to escape from Nate's plantation and get to Canada. As the war gathers momentum, Walt, Nate and Sunday are drawn farther and farther in, until they arrive at a shattering conclusion during the battle of Shiloh.

Wilson "...makes sure that each character is well-rounded, with interesting sides to tell in the story...Easy to read, yet based on historical facts, this book takes the Civil War period in history from a dry read based on statistics, to a real situation being played out on both sides of the 49th Parallel. The impassioned beliefs and actions of people on both sides of the conflict captures the interest and makes the horrors of war real.
It was so well-written that I was drawn in immediately, and I usually avoid anything to do with war...History can be interesting."
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"Wilson takes a hard look at war and its consequences through the eyes of young protagonists...(he) provides his usual challenge to black-and-white thinking, prodding readers to think critically. Heroes are hard to come by in this historical fiction, and ethical choices are as difficult to determine as they are to make."-Quill & Quire

The Caught in Conflict Collection is an imprint of fast-paced, historically accurate, morally-complex quick reads for Teens and Adults.
Number of Pages: 148
Dimensions: 0.34 x 8 x 5 IN
Publication Date: May 30, 2023
ISBN9798223231172
Author John Wilson
PublisherJohn Wilson
GenreYoung adult
FormatPaperback
PublishedMay 2023
LanguageENG- English
Pages148
Weight1.0 lb
Target AudienceTeens & young adults and Adults
Print SizeStandard Print

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About John Wilson

Terry began his career in brass at age ten in the band of Tower Colliery in South Wales where his father worked as a miner. He was awarded a Glamorgan scholarship at age eighteen to study the French horn with Barry Tuckwell at the Royal Academy of music in London. Terry later became professor of horn at the Academy. He also conducted brass ensemble classes there, and was later appointed an associate. In the distinguished career that followed he was to become a member of the London Mozart players, the Royal Philharmonic and the London Symphony Orchestra, always in demand for the leading brass ensembles such as the, Barry Tuckwell Horn quartet, the Jack Brymer Wind Soloists and the Philip Jones brass group. Terry composed, conducted, and arranged music for the RPO brass, LSO brass. He also composed the theme and incidental music for Harlech TV's The Pretenders; the orchestra being assembled from London's "session", community, and principals from the London orchestras, and conducted the recording sessions himself, at Abbey road studios. He was invited, by the actor Robert Hardy to arrange the final hymn, for the Rhos-Cwm Tawe male choir, and the solo trumpet of Maurice Murphy, at the memorial service for Richard Burton at the church of St. Martin in the fields Trafalgar square. He played as a member of the LSO, at the opening concert of the Barbican centre and at the Eightieth birthday concert of Aaron Copland, and as a studio player, in backing orchestras for many top performers such as Tony Bennet, Barbara Streisand, Shirley Bassey, Jack Jones, and Peggy Lee. He was a featured player in the orchestras of many world famous arrangers and composers, such as Henry Mancini, Billy May, Michel Legrand and Barry White's "Love Unlimited' orchestra. Terry also played on dozens of film soundtracks, including Battle of Britain, Diamonds are Forever, Superman, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, Star Wars, The Empire Strikes Back, and The Return of the Jedi where he can be heard playing the famous horn solo at the funeral of Darth Vader.

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