
audiobook
by Henry F. (Henry Francis) Keenan
A TALE OF THE WAR - BY - HENRY F. KEENAN
WHOSE LIFE AND CONDUCT EMBODY AND ILLUSTRATE - THE MANLINESS, MODESTY, AND WORTH - THAT FANCY DELIGHTS TO EMBALM IN FICTION - THIS BOOK IS INSCRIBED - BY ONE AMONG THE MANY WITNESSES OF HIS NOBLE CAREER - HENRY F. KEENAN
BOOK I. - THE CARIBEES. - CHAPTER I. - THE BOY IN BLUE.
CHAPTER II. - FLAG AND FAITH.
CHAPTER III. - MALBROOK S'EN VA-T-EN GUERRE.
CHAPTER IV. - GUELPH AND GHIBELLINE.
CHAPTER V. - A NAPOLEONIC EPIGRAM.
CHAPTER VI. - ON THE POTOMAC.
CHAPTER VII. - THE STEP THAT COSTS.
CHAPTER VIII. - AN ARMY WITH BANNERS.
Jack Sprague is a restless youth whose imagination is filled with the great battles of history. Expelled from college for a rebellious act, he carries the fire of West Point dreams and a longing for the battlefield into the turbulent years before the Civil War. As political tensions rise, his charismatic drive draws a small band of fellow students into a fierce, unofficial rivalry on campus.
When news of the first shots at Fort Sumter reaches the school, the campus splits into rival factions, and Jack finds himself thrust into the role of a would‑be commander. He rallies his friends, swearing a provisional oath and enlisting, while the looming conflict promises to test his ideals and courage. The story follows his early steps toward a military career, set against the charged atmosphere of a nation on the brink.
Language
en
Duration
~13 hours (788K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2003-11-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1850–1928
Best known for the once-anonymous novel The Money-Makers, this American journalist and novelist wrote with a sharp eye for class conflict and public life. His career moved from Civil War service into newspaper work, fiction, and a long literary life shaped by politics, travel, and debate.
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