Vicksburg, James Reasoner
Vicksburg, James Reasoner
List: $20.95 | Sale: $14.66
Club: $10.47

Vicksburg

Author: James Reasoner

Narrator: Lloyd James

Unabridged: 11 hr 24 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 06/25/2005


Synopsis

Vicksburg is the fifth in a series of novels spanning the Civil War and describing its effects on one southern family. Cory Brannon must abandon the supply train to undertake a vital mission for the Confederate commander in charge of Vicksburgs defenses.

About James Reasoner

James Reasoner has been a professional writer for more than thirty years. In that time, he has authored several hundred novels and short stories in numerous genres. Best known for his Westerns, historical novels, and war novels, he is also the author of two mystery novels that have achieved cult classic status: Texas Wind and Dust Devils.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Mary

This book is more about Cory and Lucille. We also get to experience the days leading to and the days of the siege of Vicksburg. The series continues to hold me. I am glad I came upon the series at the time that I did so I can read all of them and won't have to wait for the next to be published.......more

This is a battle that many of the history books ignore. You read about the importance of the Gettysburg campaign, and all of the other eastern campaigns... but you never really find much about the struggles of the western campaigns. Usually, you hear/read about the Union army moving down the Mississ......more

Goodreads review by Chris

I enjoyed the 5th book in the Civil War series and really do like the characters of Cory and Lucille. Vicksburg is one of the turning points in the Civil War and I thought that the author spent a little too much time on the love story between the two main characters and a not enough time on the actu......more

Goodreads review by Levi

Reasoner again delivers an amazing story. But, contrary to the other books in this serie so far, Vicksburg has a quite unecessary side-story between Lucille and Palmer Kincaid. The last 2 chapters are the conclusion of this sub-plot that honestly, was very unneeded. The book would be better without......more