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In March of 1863, the days were ticking down on Brenton Christie's
medical leave. If he had been lucky, he would have been lounging by
the cracker barrel back in Delaware, Ohio impressing his neighbors
with stories of the real war. But the foot soldier had not smelled
Lady Luck's perfume in a long time, and she was not courting him
now. Instead, General Ulysses Grant had shanghaied him as scout
aboard the ironclad Cincinnati, and he was steaming up Deer Creek
with Admiral David Porter's swamp navy to take Vicksburg by the
back door. It should have been easy duty, but instead he
encountered primeval forests, cannibalistic wildlife, and tenacious
Confederates. The Army of the Tennessee did not take winters off,
and Grant had already lit the fuse to his Vicksburg juggernaut.
Ensuing events catch Christie in the crossfire riding with Benjamin
Grierson and he discovers a second war behind the front lines-one
fought by warriors without rifles who are just as idealistic and
ruthless, comrades in enemy colors, and enemies among his own. This
is the second Civil War novel by Jeane Heimberger Candido, who has
contributed to Blue & Gray Magazine, Civil War Historian, has
appeared on PBS, and enjoys living in two world.
Karamo Bohannon, who had been given asylum from the war-torn Congo
to become a top echelon professor at a Big Conference university,
is found dead in his office on the last day of his contract. Less
than twenty-four hours before, he had announced his candidacy for a
hotly-contested seat in the U.S. Congress. Was his death due to
natural causes resulting from a lifetime of Type A stress on a
depleted body and soul? Or was it murder? Before the question could
be answered, all trace of the man--his past, his present, and his
projected future had not been just redacted from the world-wide
cyber memory banks, but completely erased. All university web
pages, faculty rosters, and catalog listings had been
sterilized--there was no listing of any man by that name having
held an esteemed teaching Chair for ten years. The scrubbing
extended to all pertinent government vital statistics in all
agencies and bureaus. The man was not just mortally dead, he
virtually had never been born. "In addition to being a cracking
good techno-murder mystery, Jeane Heimberger Candido's newest book
affords what prestigious editor John W. Campbell of 'Astounding
Magazine' later 'Analog' called 'a diagonal slice through society's
culture of the day.' This book ought to be a shot across the bow.
If you think the world she describes does not actually exist, the
politicos and pundits have done their job. Jeane's book adds
another level of complexity to the world as it is. Read between the
lines." H.J. Popowski, Author & Historian "I was one of the
first fans allowed to read this mystery. It was well thought out
for timeline and characters. I enjoyed especially the insurance
investigators. I read until my eyes were tired not wanting to put
the book down more than once." Stephen Davis, Cyber Security
Analyst, MIS
In March of 1863, the days were ticking down on Brenton Christie's
medical leave. If he had been lucky, he would have been lounging by
the cracker barrel back in Delaware, Ohio impressing his neighbors
with stories of the real war. But the foot soldier had not smelled
Lady Luck's perfume in a long time, and she was not courting him
now. Instead, General Ulysses Grant had shanghaied him as scout
aboard the ironclad Cincinnati, and he was steaming up Deer Creek
with Admiral David Porter's swamp navy to take Vicksburg by the
back door. It should have been easy duty, but instead he
encountered primeval forests, cannibalistic wildlife, and tenacious
Confederates. The Army of the Tennessee did not take winters off,
and Grant had already lit the fuse to his Vicksburg juggernaut.
Ensuing events catch Christie in the crossfire riding with Benjamin
Grierson and he discovers a second war behind the front lines-one
fought by warriors without rifles who are just as idealistic and
ruthless, comrades in enemy colors, and enemies among his own. This
is the second Civil War novel by Jeane Heimberger Candido, who has
contributed to Blue & Gray Magazine, Civil War Historian, has
appeared on PBS, and enjoys living in two world.
Pages In Read Ink: Mysteries of Then and Now challenges mystery
lovers to beat the author to the punch "The Hunt for the Gray
Ghost" challenges a theory that is hard to dispute: Was Abraham
Lincoln the victim of a Confederate conspiracy or was he the victim
of a cabinet member's passion to succeed him as president? Even
heroes can be turned to conspiracy, fellows can become enemies, and
adversaries become comrades. Can a former legacy of Las Vegas divas
("To Be Too Rather than Too") find the killer of a high-powered
divorce attorney when so many would pawn their limos and diamonds
for a share in a hitman? In "The Problem with the Monsignor"
Patricia McGuire, Sister of (Show 'em No) Mercy keeps the police on
task as they investigate the assault to commit murder on the Head
Master of a school for over-privilged boys. A "Motion to Dismiss?"
could be taken from the headlines of the nightly news cable
station. Does a departed soul take $30,000 worth of plastic surgery
and a martyr's death to heaven in "Is This Don Giovanni or Is It
Really Hell?" Pages In Read Ink touches every period of history and
every profession. I have found victims and felons from the best
stations of life. But the lives of murderers, extortionists, and
homicide police make much better company than saints.
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