No Girls Allowed
Young Heroes of History Series—#5
1-57249-324-0, PB, $ 6.95
The roles of women in the Civil War, sometimes apparent and sometimes hidden, are depicted
at the Battle of Antietam along with the frustrations doctors and nurses faced in the war.
With Civil War destroying the country, Mary Adams and Lynn Rhodes decide to help even if
they aren’t wanted. Mary joins an aid society healing the wounded, eventually meeting Clara
Barton. Lynn joins her twin brother and disguises herself as a boy to fi ght alongside the men
and boys of the Union army. Both face different challenges as they struggle to be treated as
equals. During the Battle of Antietam they fi nd themselves forced to work together to not only
save the country but to somehow take a stand for women in a war that was only for men.
77TH New York Volunteers
“Sojering” in the VI Corps
1-57249-352-6, HC, $ 29.95
After surviving the Peninsular Campaign, the regiment participated in all the Army of the
Potomac’s major battles, and held off Old Jubal Early and his rebel army in a string of victories
from Fort Stevens outside of Washington through Cedar Creek in the Shenandoah Valley.
During the bloodiest war in America’s history, bonds formed when these men touched elbows
with one another in over 50 battles—bonds strong enough to keep them coming back for 50
annual reunions.
Lee’s Last Stand
Sailor’s Creek, Virginia, 1865
1-57249-251-1, HC, $ 29.95
This is the story of the events at Sailor’s Creek, Virginia that bloody spring day when Lee’s
vaunted army was fi nally and forever ruined and offers a compelling look at the last battle of
the once mighty Army of Northern Virginia.
A tragic saga of blue and gray dueling in the last major clash before Lee’s surrender at
Appomattox three days later and where Lee exclaimed, “My God! Has the army dissolved?” as
he watched his shattered legions ? ee the battlefi eld.
D-Day and Beyond
A True Story of Escape and POW Survival
1-57249-362-3, PB, $ 8.95
A fascinating true account of one man’s struggles to survive and do his duty as an American
military man amid the chaos of World War II. Stanley E. Edwards, Jr., a C47 pilot with the
82nd Airborne Division, was just twenty-two on D-Day when his job was to drop paratroopers
in Normandy, France. Instead, his plane was shot down and he was
forced to jump and struggles to survive in enemy territory and in prison
camps as a POW.
Bloody Path to the Shenandoah
Fighting with the Union VI Corps in the American Civil War
1-57249-357-7, HC, $ 29.95
The Union VI Corps participated in such hard-fought battles as the Wilderness, North Anna
River, the slaughter at Cold Harbor, and most notably at Cedar Creek. An overwhelming victory
by the forces of Jubal Early was later turned into a resounding victory by Union forces that
included the VI Corps is well known because of Thomas Buchanan’s poem “Sheridan’s Ride.” The
Union VI Corps would continue the struggle to their fi nal destiny at Appomattox Court House.
P.O. Box 708
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Phone: 717-532-2237
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