Wednesday, March 20, 2019

The Green Soldier by J. Edward Gore (Spotlight, excerpt, review, and GIVEAWAY) GFT






by 
J. Edward Gore



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GENRE: YA Historical fiction



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BLURB:



John Gore is eighteen years old in 1862 rural Kentucky. He has struggled his entire life with stuttering and the ridicule associated with it. Unable to speak well, he has focused on writing. Seeing the opportunity for advancement in the military—and with it, respect—John joins the Union army. Unfortunately, his stuttering prevents him from warning a friend of an enemy attack and John watches his friend die. He is racked with guilt and the fear that others saw him fail at the key moment . . . a fear that proves prescient.



John soon meets a girl but they must forge a friendship and then courtship through letters, allowing him to express to her what he can’t say in person. Meanwhile at home, John’s impetuous younger brother causes trouble with garrisoned Union troops angry at Southern sympathizers.

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EXCERPT


There’s been some light fighting every day with the rebels close behind us, and especially once we settled into Knoxville. There were some rebel sharpshooters who dug a rifle pit just outside our walls and they were picking off some of our soldiers now and then. A boy would be talking or looking around and then he’d either scream or just fall back dead. A regiment with the Second Michigan was ordered to take care of those sharpshooters. Our men ran out, but they were fired upon, and when they got to the pit they found more than they’d bargained for. The Johnnies were in the woods waiting for them and fired without mercy. Less than half of our soldiers came back alive. Now their sharpshooters target our officers. Three days ago a lieutenant was giving out orders and in the middle of his talking he just fell over. Graveyard dead. He never knew it.

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AUTHOR Bio and Links:



Edward purposely avoided history classes in college because he felt they were boring. Years later he read the Shaara trilogy, opening his eyes to how fascinating the Civil War could be. He recalled as a boy his grandmother telling him of his ancestor, John Gore, who fought for the Union. Visiting battle sites and participating in reenactments has made the Civil War more than just pictures and words. Instead he could feel the fear, excitement, grief and anger.

Born and raised in central Kentucky, not far from John’s birthplace, Edward currently lives outside of Nashville, TN with his wife, two kids and a goldendoodle.







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GIVEAWAY

a Rafflecopter giveaway


The tour dates can be found here



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My review:


 
3.75 out of 5 stars



The Green Soldier by J. Edward Gore is an epistolary novel that tells of young John Gore’s experiences as he joins the Union army and learns to be a soldier in the war between the States. Hampered by his stutter, John strives to advance, but the realities of war force him to reevaluate his goals.



This historical novel is told completely through letters between the main character and his younger brother as well as a young woman he develops a relationship with. The three viewpoints of the Civil war give different perspectives on the privations, dangers, and horrors attendant on war and humanize the struggle. The realism portrayed is gut-wrenching as the author conveys some of the price paid by so many, who often had no personal understanding of the plight of those they are fighting to free. This is a very dark and sobering tale, and I was very unhappy with the ending, although I know it is realistic. It is a tribute to the author’s technique that I became invested in the main characters and winced as I turned the pages, fearing the worst at every turn. The author’s disclaimer at the end is a bit confusing, especially in light of the picture that comes before it but I think that those who are in search of a stark story that brings to life the Civil War from the perspective of Union supporters should consider this one.





A copy of this title was provided for review





20 comments:

  1. Thanks so much for sharing a book description and giveaway also. Sounds great!

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  2. Thank you for hosting and for the review.

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  3. I'm working today but will check in periodically.

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  4. Great review, sounds like a good book!

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  5. Did you help design the cover? Bernie Wallace BWallace1980(at)hotmail(d0t)com

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    1. Thank you for the question. I gave the artist the synopsis of the book and a couple of photos, although not the photo of the soldier. He came up with the idea of covering the soldier's mouth since the main character stutters. I really liked it.

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    2. Sorry I answered on a different computer and wasn't signed in.

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  6. Thanks for the giveaway; I like the excerpt and the cover.

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  7. Thank you Cali. I hope you like the story.

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  8. Thank you for the comment Dale. I hope you like it.

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  9. I was a really bad stutterer growing up, and boy..the shame and ridicule is real! It took me most of my life to be able to express myself and my brain works too quick for my mouth to keep up. This book sounds like a perfect read for me. Thank you for this. It's like you read my mind!

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  10. Thank you for your comment Mya. I bet you'll be able to relate to the main character. I hope you enjoy it.

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