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MacKinlay Kantor

    4 février 1904 – 11 octobre 1977

    Benjamin McKinlay Kantor était un journaliste, romancier et scénariste américain dont les œuvres exploraient fréquemment les thèmes de la guerre de Sécession américaine. Kantor possédait un style narratif distinctif, perfectionné dès ses débuts aux côtés de sa mère, journaliste. Sa production prolifique comprend plus de 30 romans et scénarios, ses écrits paraissant souvent dans des publications de premier plan. Les expériences de Kantor en tant que correspondant de guerre pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale et la guerre de Corée ont nourri sa narration, offrant une perspective unique sur les expériences humaines au milieu du conflit.

    God and My Country
    If the South Had Won the Civil War
    Andersonville
    Glory for Me
    Signal Thirty-Two
    Valley Forge
    • Valley Forge

      • 350pages
      • 13 heures de lecture
      4,0(1)Évaluer

      MACKINLAY KANTOR Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Andersonville VALLEY FORGE Poignant, tender, and powerful, VALLEY FORGE brings into sharp new focus one of the most tensely dramatic episodes of the American Revolution. With warmth and wit, compassion and sensitivity, MacKinlay Kantor evokes the flavor, pulse and texture of the last quarter of the eighteenth century, transporting the reader into the houses and workshops, kitchens and stables, parlors and bedrooms of ordinary citizens. Here are not only the soldiers of Valley Forge, but the panorama of the Revolution itself. George Washington, lamenting the remoteness and lack of valor in the Congress, anticipating new battle; the sprightly, good-humored Martha, always loyal and loving to a fau

      Valley Forge
    • 767 pages, Civil War Novel. 6 1/2 By 9 1/2 By 2" thick.

      Andersonville
    • God and My Country

      • 138pages
      • 5 heures de lecture
      3,0(1)Évaluer

      Spur Award-Winning Author Larry D. Sweazy A Josiah Wolfe, Texas Ranger Novel Assigned to track an Indian raiding party, Texas Ranger Josiah Wolfe expects to return home to his son in Austin in a few days. But when the Ranger and his compatriots from the Frontier Battalion are overtaken by two Comanche scouts, they find themselves captives instead of captors. Comanches aren't known for going easy on their prisoners, so Josiah is surprised when they don't immediately shoot him. Turns out there's a price on his head thanks to Liam O'Reilly, a gang leader also known as the Badger. Josiah has a checkered history with the outlaw-he apprehended the gang's previous leader-but he doesn't know why O'Reilly wants him dead. As the Comanches drag him to the town where the Badger is waiting, Josiah knows that time is running out. But Texas Rangers are hard men to kill, and Josiah Wolfe is no exception...

      God and My Country
    • Lee and Grant at Appomattox

      • 208pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      3,6(18)Évaluer

      Designed for young readers, this illustrated history recounts the events that led to the surrender of the Confederacy, and the personalities involved.

      Lee and Grant at Appomattox
    • Wicked Water

      • 228pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      Basis for the film Hannah Lee: An American Primitive MACKINLAY KANTOR Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Andersonville "Well," Montgomery challenged him, "how many people have you killed?" The young man stopped laughing. His face turned into black stone. "Sixty-seven." To Western cattle barons in 1899 the encroaching homesteaders were like cinders stinging their eyes. But they were legal. Even the rustlers among them seldom were brought to justice for lack of evidence. There seemed to be only one way to pry loose those on the land, and discourage others from settling: scare them off. To do just that some of the ranchers met in Pearl City in secret conclave. They agreed to hire the most notorious professional killer then known-Bus Crow. They figured that a small dose of Bus Crow would quickly clear the ranges, and keep them clear. WICKED WATER is the story of the bloody descent of Bus Crow on the homesteaders of Pearl County. It is the story, too, of the woman who loved him in spite of herself, who bowed to justice in spite of her love. Against a background of driving action, MacKinlay Kantor probes the mysteries of a killer's mind, of the dark rebellion that made him cry: I'll always kill. I'll shoot them down ... get a gun and keep killing and killing. A NOVEL ABOUT A KILLER-BY THE AUTHOR OF MIDNIGHT LACE & FRONTIER

      Wicked Water
    • Happy Land

      • 102pages
      • 4 heures de lecture

      MACKINLAY KANTOR Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Andersonville THIS NOVEL WAS THE BASIS FOR THE 1943 FILM HAPPY LAND "Hail, Columbia, happy land! Hail, ye heroes, heav'n-born band-" Happy Land is about Rusty Marsh, and the life he lived. It is about ordinary folks, and how they came to be brave. It is the record of a civilization which strengthens itself with Boy Scouts and bob-rides, with public high schools and neighborly kindnesses, with churches and drug stores and cornfields and Indian stories-with the simple fare of American life which once seemed dull and now holds bewitching beauty. This civilization must not perish from our land or from this earth. It will not perish while one Rusty Marsh is alive to fight for it.

      Happy Land
    • Arouse and Beware

      • 348pages
      • 13 heures de lecture

      MACKINLAY KANTOR Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Andersonville A Novel of Escape During the Civil War BASIS FOR THE FILM THE MAN FROM DAKOTA This is the story of three strange companions who attain what seldom has been won by any escaping prisoners. Two Yankee soldiers escape from Belle Island, the Confederate Prison, in 1864. As they make their way northward to the Union lines on the Rapidan they are joined by a woman who is fleeing from Richmond. The hazards of their painful flight are tremendous as they travel by night on roads as ominous as the incredible future awaiting them. Starvation and feasting, the swift beat of love, the primitive encounter, the hot cry of triumph-these elements are combined in this bold and valiant tale of sacrifice and high devotion. Arouse and Beware, first published in 1936, was widely praised by the critics and became a best seller. Now with the success of MacKinlay Kantor's great novel, Andersonville, and the enormous interest in the Civil War period, it is being re-issued again to be enjoyed by a whole new generation of readers.

      Arouse and Beware