Frank Ogden's War


Book Description

Frank Ogden is a retiree enjoying his condo when shots are heard from the apartment complex across the street. Included with the sounds of the gunfire, a bullet blasted through his lanai screen and into the wall next to his chair, making crime statistics a personal reality. The killing of a young boy at the apartments sparks his desire to be a participant in reducing crime. He sets out to discover criminal acts around his neighborhood and soon becomes involved in a more personal way. He is fighting a drug mob and soon finds that the mob is out to end his meddling. He continues his fight despite being constantly targeted by the mob. He skirts the law and mob as he walks a path ending at a tragedy unexpected. You will cry and then shout, "Get'em Frank," when reading the final chapters




The Story of Alabama


Book Description

Based on T.M. Owen's history of Alabama and dictionary of Alabama biography published in 1921.




Utah in the World War


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John A. Quitman


Book Description

The premier secessionist of antebellum Mississippi, John A. Quitman was one of the half-dozen or so most prominent radicals in the entire South. In this full-length biography, Robert E. May takes issue with the recent tendency to portray secessionists as rabble-rousing, maladjusted outsiders bent on the glories of separate nationhood. May reveals Quitman to have been an ambitious but relatively stable insider who reluctantly advocated secession because of a despondency over slavery’s long-range future in the Union and a related conviction that northerners no longer respected southern claims to equality as American citizens. A fervent disciple of South Carolina “radical” John C. Calhoun’s nullification theories, Quitman also gained notoriety as his region’s most strident slavery imperialist. He articulated the case for new slaver territory, participated in the Texas Revolution, won national acclaim as a volunteer general in the Mexican War, and organized a private military—or “filibustering”—expedition with the intent of liberating Cuba from Spanish rule and making the island a new slave state. In 1850, while governor of Mississippi during the California crisis, Quitman wielded his influence in a vain attempt to induce Mississippi secession. Later, in Congress, he marked out an extreme southern position on Kansas. Mississippi’s most vehement “fire-eater,” Quitman played a significant role in the North-South estrangement that led to the American Civil War. The first critical biography of this important figure, May’s study sheds light on such current historical controversies as whether antebellum southerners were peculiarly militaristic or “antibourgeois” and helps illuminate the slave-master relations, mobility, intraregional class and geographic friction, partisan politics, and family customs of the Old South.