“Once a Foe, Now a Friend”


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The Civil War saved the Union, but serious divisions and great animosity remained between north and south. Few Northerners had contact with soldiers who had fought against them. Not so George N. Bliss, a former captain in the first Rhode Island Cavalry. He befriended many ex-Confederates, including four he had wounded. His efforts resulted in many unvarnished first-hand accounts. These friendships lasted decades and led to the very warm and frank letters presented here.




A Legacy of Valor


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An educated young man, his observations and political commentary reflect his evolution from eager young private to hardened veteran."--Jacket.




The Rebellion Record


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The Rebellion Record


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The House on the River


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The House On The River: Insurrection tries to shed light on the path of deviation in the backdrop of roles played by different state and nonstate actors in a conflict zone. It offers an insight of the conflict situation from an insurgents point of view. Samir, who has had a rebellious childhood, is provoked to join a group of insurgents to avenge his best friends murder. After initial failures, he devises a plan to kill a renegade who works for armed forces and is responsible for his friends death. He makes his own gun, but his resolve to kill the renegade cedes after he shoots and injures him. Despite strong forces that tend to influence the characters, inherent and elemental traits in them keep resisting the coercion against all odds.




Unfinished Conversations


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A century ago, European and North American archaeologists first came upon the extraordinary ruins of Chichen Itza and Tulum—and started to converse with the Mayas who inhabited the forests of the Yucatan. In this thought-provoking history of a century-long "unfinished conversation" between the indigenous Indians and the white intruders, paul Sullivan shows how each party to the dialogue shaped the cross-cultural encounters to their own ends. North American anthropologists preferred to see the Mayas as a primitive people and studied them, they claimed, with scientific neutrality. Yet the anthropologists hid their real intentions and lied to the Mayas, pretending to be chicle dealers or explorers, and they also (in certain important cases) worked for the United States government as covert intelligence agents. Similarly, the Mayas had their own hidden agendas—wanting guns and money from the Americans to fight the central Mexican government—and consequently charged the Americans for the tribal lore and religious secrets they imparted. Sullivan asks us to view the history of Western-Maya dialogue as a Maya would—setting the prophecies of his ancestors, the advice of his grandparents, and the events of last week in a long continuum that extends way into the future and can foretell the end of the world. By taking this view, once can see how this particular Central American people has constituted a new life, a new past, and a new future out of the ruins of great suffering and defeat. This surprising, moving, and intellectually stimulating book will remind us how even actions initiated with the best intentions can be perverted when tested by the realities of political violence, acute dependency, mutual ignorance, and fear.




Feral Breed Motorcycle Club


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Dragon Wine Volume One


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