Sharpshooter: A Civil War Novel

$14.95
by David Healey

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1864, General Ulysses S. Grant's Army of the Potomac is positioned across the trenches from the remnants of General Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia. One major Union campaign will put the Confederate capital into Yankee hands. Lucas Cole is the best sharpshooter in the Confederate army, his skills as a sniper almost legendary. Now Cole has been assigned to his most challenging mission yet-and General Ulysses S. Grant is his target. With the help of a female Rebel spy, Lucas Cole will attempt to alter the course of the war with a single bullet. Using an artfully planned seduction, that spy will try to clear Cole's line of fire. And with all his might, one man will fight to prevent an assassination that could ensure Confederate victory. "SHARPSHOOTER" has the feel of a techno-thriller, the kind offered by Tom Clancy or Dean Koontz ... SHARPSHOOTER moves quickly and is filled with all manner of intrigue." --The Civil War News AN INTERVIEW ABOUT DAVID'S CIVIL WAR NOVEL 'SHARPSHOOTER' Q. Where did you get the idea for SHARPSHOOTER? A. I wanted to write a Civil War novel that was different from others that have mainly been dramas set against the backdrop of the war. To do this, I began to ask myself a lot of "what if" questions - such as "what if" the South had tried to assassinate General Grant. What I came up with was a story about a very personal war. It doesn't take place on the battlefield, but it's just as brutal and the outcome of the whole war could change depending on the sharpshooter's bullet. Q. How did you get your interest in history? A. I grew up on a small farm in an old farm house that was built during the 1860s. It was a very rural area but located at an interesting crossroads of the National Road that led west from Baltimore and the Washington Road that led north from the capital. There was a lot of action in the area during the Civil War, with Union troops passing through all the time. In fact, a neighbor used to tell me stories about how his grandfather would hide his horses on the woods on our farm, out of sight of passing Yankee troops.There was actually a skirmish nearby when J.E.B. Stuart's cavalry rode through on the way to Gettysburg. Old-timers told me some stories about things they'd found on our farm and the farms next door - a musket, a Confederate belt buckle, Confederate paper money - which makes me believe at least some of the cavalry rode right through there. Growing up, I always liked to imagine what it would be like to have Rebel cavalry suddenly ride up the old roadbed that cut through our farm.Some people think of history as being dry and dull, but they're mistaken. The ghosts of history are all around us, and it only takes a little imagination to make them come alive.  Q. Are you planning any other books besides SHARPSHOOTER? A. Yes. My next novel is REBEL TRAIN, about an elite group of Confederate raiders who capture Abraham Lincoln on his way to deliver the Gettysburg address.  Q. How long did it take you to write SHARPSHOOTER? A. With all the research and then the actual writing, it took about two years. I used to work an evening shift, so I would write all morning and then go to my newspaper job. Saturdays and Sundays I'd be at the computer, too - basically whenever I found time to work. It takes an unbelievable amount of effort to write a novel. You've got to stick to it.  Q. Which character would be the most fun to have a beer with? A. Definitely Uriah Snodgrass. He likes to have a good time. He has a sense of humor. Don't play poker with him, though - you'll lose whatever is in your wallet, and then some.  Q. The main female character in the book is a Confederate spy in Washington. Tell us something about her. A. It's important to remember that Washington was largely a Southern city in 1861, and many of the older, "society" families were sympathetic to the Confederacy. When the war broke out, these people found themselves on the wrong side of the Potomac River. Anne finds herself stranded in the Union capital, but she does all she can to help the Confederacy. She's a complicated person - on the one hand, trying to keep up appearances as her money dwindles even as she watches Yankee profiteers grow rich off the war; on the other hand, using her contacts in society to learn Union secrets that she sends South. It's a dangerous game, and although she's terrified of going to prison or being hanged, she has a great deal of courage.  Q. What's the hardest part about writing a book like SHARPSHOOTER? A. What's tough is that it's not set against the backdrop of any particular battle or event - the attempt to assassinate Grant takes place all on its own. The novel creates its own historical scenario. Of course, I've been as faithful as possible to the larger history of the Civil War era.  Q. The assassination attempt is pure fiction, then? A. Who can say for certain that it didn't happen? Don't forget that Confederate agents infiltrated Grant's headquarters at City Po

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