Showing posts with label U.S.history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label U.S.history. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 10, 2025

The Apache Kid Book Blitz #rabtbooktours



ARMY APACHE SCOUT (The Apache Kid Chronicles-Volume 1)

 

Fiction / Indigenous / Historical Fiction / Native American

Date Published: 06-03-2015

Publisher: Hat Creek


 

From Army Scout to Outlaw, from Hero to Legend.

He survived the embers of the fires and murders at the Camp Grant Massacre of the Apache. Young Has-kay-bay-nay-ntayl ("brave and tall and will come to a mysterious end"), a child known by many names but later feared and revered as the Apache Kid-grows up in two cultures where survival means choosing between loyalty and betrayal, his people and their overseers. Trained by the legendary Al Sieber and other former military officers, the Kid makes a meteoric rise to prominence as a First Sergeant of scouts, a warrior whose skill and leadership helps win the U.S. Army's fight against renegades and maintain peace between Apache bands at San Carlos Reservation.

But neither war nor peace are ever simple. When forced to make an impossible choice between his own People or the Army, he chooses his People. His choice leads the Army to imprison him at Alcatraz. Released early by the Army, Arizona Territory tries to imprison him again but he, with seven other Apache on the way to Yuma Penitentiary, escape and become the object of the greatest manhunt in Arizona history. The only one to survive the manhunt, Kid becomes both a ghost and a legend, the most feared border outlaw for the next ten years before vanishing into Mexico.

Seen through Kid's eyes, The Apache Kid: Army Apache Scout brings to life the thrilling and tragic journey of Apache Kid as a young man and the best of the Army's Apache scouts.

 

About the Author

W. MICHAEL FARMER blends over fifteen years of research into 19th-century Apache history and Southwest living to create richly authentic stories. A retired PhD physicist, his scientific work included laser-based measurements of atmospheric aerosols, and he authored a two-volume reference on atmospheric effects.

His fiction and essays have earned numerous honors, including three Will Rogers Gold and six Silver Medallions, multiple New Mexico-Arizona Book Awards, and a Spur Finalist Award. His novels include The Life and Times of Yellow Boy, Legends of the Desert, and the award-winning Geronimo duology. His latest novels include Trini! Come! and the Chato Duology, featuring Desperate Warrior and Proud Outcast.

 

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Bolo the Brave Book Blitz #rabtbooktours



Kids Western Adventure

Date Published: 04-17-2025

Publisher: Speaking Volumes


 

 

You can learn a lot from a dog . . .

 

Meet Charlie Spears, a 10-year-old boy living on the High Plains of Texas in the late 1800s. Charlie lives with his Grandpa Will, who runs a chuckwagon, feeding all the adventurous folks traveling West in wagon trains. After losing his parents to illness, Charlie is often lonely and longs for a true friend. One day, by a stroke of luck and a big wag of a tail, Charlie meets a funny-looking dog named Bolo, who is also looking for a friend. Together, they embark on a journey where Charlie learns important life lessons.

 

In the first story: Bolo the Brave, Charlie discovers the meaning of courage and how to face challenges when a friend is in danger.

 

In the second story: True Friend, Charlie gains valuable insight—not to judge people by their limitations, but rather by their actions and character.

 

In the third story: Outcast, Charlie and his friends learn the importance of getting to know someone instead of passing judgment based on their appearance.

 

Together, Charlie and Bolo make new friends, confront dangers, and grow through valuable life lessons. As the story reminds us, you can learn a lot from a dog. 

 

About the Author

Jim Jones is a native Texan who lives in Rio Rancho, NM. In addition to being a Western novelist, he is also an award-winning Western singer/songwriter (International Western Music Association 2014 Male Performer of the Year; IWMA Song of the Year Award, 2019; Western Writers of America Spur Award, 2013, 2017 & 2021 for Western Song of the Year) who performs at festivals, coffeehouses and other venues throughout the West. Rustler's Moon, Jim's first novel, was a finalist in two categories for the 2009 New Mexico Book Awards, Best Historical Fiction and Best First Book. His novel, Colorado Moon, 2011, is the second in the Jared Delaney Series and it won the Western Music Association's 2011 Award for Outstanding Western Book. The third book in the series, Waning Moon, was published in 2013 and was also a New Mexico/Arizona Book Awards Finalist for Best Historical Fiction. The Big Empty, a spinoff series, was published in 2016 by Five Star Publishing and it, too, was a NM/AZ Book Awards Finalist in the Best Historical Fiction category. The second book in the spinoff series, The Lights of Cimarron, was published by Five Star in early 2019. The fourth book in the Jared Delaney Series, Halo Moon, was released in November, 2022 and won the 2023 AZ/NM Book Award for the Best in Adventure category. Jim creates gripping Old West characters about whom readers in the 21st century can care deeply. They struggle with tough economic times and corrupt government officials...wait, that's going on right now! Guess what, it was happening then, too. The more things change, the more they stay the same. Jim is a proud member of both the Western Writers of America and the Western Music Association. Although he writes about cattle rustling, Jim has never rustled cattle.


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Tuesday, May 13, 2025

Too Much the Lion Release Blitz #rabtbooktours


US Historical Fiction/Civil War

Date Published: 05-13-2025

Publisher: Bariso Press


 

The soldiers did the fighting; the generals, the Infighting

In the waning months of the American Civil War, a delusional Confederate commander makes a desperate attempt to change the course of the South’s dwindling hopes by invading middle Tennessee. The tragic result of Lt. Gen. John Bell Hood’s misplaced hubris devastates his Army of Tennessee and alters the lives of the citizens of Franklin, Tennessee.

In a historical novel reminiscent of The Killer Angels, Too Much the Lion follows a handful of Confederate generals, infantrymen and local residents through the five days leading up to the horrific Battle of Franklin on November 30, 1864. The lives of soldiers ranging from Major General Patrick Cleburne to Brigadier General Hiram Granbury and from Sergeant Major Sumner Cunningham to Corporal Sam Watkins will be forever changed by Hood’s decisions and mistakes.

Franklin civilians like apprehensive and loving mother Mary Alice McPhail and teen Hardin Figuers, desperate to serve the Confederacy but too young to enlist, are ensnared in the events that will bring death and devastation to their very doorsteps. Devout Confederate Chaplain Charles T. Quintard must reconcile his religious beliefs with his support of slavery. Slaves like the elder Wiley Howard and the inquisitive young Henry B. Free are trapped on the fault line between what has been and what could be.

Too Much the Lion offers an unvarnished account of the dying days of the Confederacy in a powerful and moving narrative of honor and betrayal, bravery and cowardice, death and survival. Told with poignancy and honesty by an accomplished novelist, Too Much the Lion achieves for the Battle of Franklin what The Killer Angels did for the Battle of Gettysburg, providing a classic fictional account of one of the Civil War’s pivotal encounters.

 

About the Author

Preston Lewis is the award-winning author of more than 50 western, historical, juvenile, and nonfiction works.  In 2021 he was inducted into the Texas Institute of Letters for his literary achievements.

Western Writers of America (WWA) has honored Lewis with two Spur Awards, one for best article and the second for best western novel.  He has received ten Will Rogers Medallion Awards (six gold, two silver and two bronze) for written western humor, short stories, short nonfiction, and traditional Western novel.

Lewis is a past president of WWA and the West Texas Historical Association, which named him a fellow in 2016.  He holds a bachelor’s degree from Baylor University and a master’s degree from Ohio State University, both in journalism.  Additionally, he has a second master’s degree in history from Angelo State University.  He lives in San Angelo, Texas, with wife Harriet Kocher Lewis.

 

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Tuesday, February 27, 2024

Hatfield 1677 #rabtbooktours


Historical Fiction

Date Published: May 21, 2024

Publisher: Acorn Publishing


 

Colonist Benjamin Waite, a devoted husband, father, and skilled military scout in King Philip’s War, reluctantly obeys orders to guide an attack against a camp of Algonquian Natives.

After the catastrophic event, Benjamin is burdened with guilt and longs for peace. But the Algonquians, led by the revered sachem Ashpelon, retaliate with vengeance upon Ben’s Massachusetts town of Hatfield, capturing over a dozen colonists, including his pregnant wife Martha and their three young daughters.

Hatfield 1677 is a tale of three interwoven yet diverging journeys of strength and survival: Benjamin, driven by love and remorse to rescue his family; Martha, forced into captivity and desperately striving to protect her children; and Ashpelon, willing to risk everything to ensure the safety and freedom of his people.

Based on the lives of the author’s ancestors, this riveting and unforgettable novel gives voice to three vastly different experiences in North America during a time before the creation of the Declaration of Independence. Then, the land was but a wilderness and a battleground; equality was not yet perceived as self-evident; and liberty and happiness were nothing more than dangerous pursuits.


About the Author

Laura C. Rader earned a BA in psychology from San Diego State University, where she minored in history and took creative writing and literature classes. She drew on those passions in her thirty-year career as a history and English teacher of elementary and middle school students. Now, a full-time historical fiction writer, Laura also enjoys studying genealogy, attending neighborhood book club meetings, taking forest walks with her Rough Collie, and visiting her adult daughter in Brooklyn. Originally from California, Laura lives twenty miles north of  Raleigh, North Carolina.  Hatfield 1677 is a work of historical fiction inspired by a story Laura discovered about her ninth great-grandparents while researching her family’s genealogy.

 

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Friday, February 23, 2024

Sun Tzu's Cafe Review #rabtbooktours



Historical Fiction / Medical Thriller/ Espionage

Date Published: January 1, 2024

 

In the era of legalized marijuana in the United States, the Chinese government has nefarious plans to exploit America's best and brightest graduate students using synthetic Hallucinogens and THC compounds. To accomplish their goal, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has partnered with a disaffected American CIA agent who was instrumental in the CIA's domestic hallucinogen experiments on American citizens known as Project MKULTRA during the Korean and Vietnam wars. The CCP have surreptitiously funded upscale cafés in each American city where marijuana has been legalized and there is an American university within walking distance of their café.

In each café, the CCP secretly adds a designer hallucinogen to the coffee. This drug opens the graduate student's minds to the power of suggestion and allows the baristas (Chinese security agents) to easily question the students for technical information concerning their graduate studies and labs. The methods used are similar to what the disaffected CIA agent learned during his MKULTRA project missions in the 1950s and 1960s. This allows the  Communist Chinese to gain a head start on America's most crucial security and technological innovations.

But there is a problem. The synthetic hallucinogen is beginning to have strange effects on some students, and these effects are being noticed. A bright Israeli E.R. doctor and his wife (an addiction counselor) living and working in Burlington, Vermont, have encountered some of these students suffering from bizarre psychotic symptoms. They suspect that there is more than meets the eye in these Chinese cafés and have started investigating. If the Chinese plan is discovered, it will open the CCP up to significant charges of international terrorism against the United States. With current congressional committee hearings focused on banning Tik Tok and other Chinese technologies, the CCP will stop at nothing to prevent this from happening.


 

Excerpt

Chapter 1

Tucson, Arizona

Monday, December 4, 2023

Haitao (海涛) picked up the shiny gray flip phone on the first ring. He had been waiting for the call from his contact in Dalian, China, the city where he was born and raised. His phone rang at the precise moment that was agreed to in his last communication. The contact timed the call to coincide with a Chinese spy satellite’s orbit above Tucson, capable of delivering an encrypted message carried on an untraceable signal. The U.S. Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI)21 knew of the satellite but had not yet cracked the latest Chinese Ministry of State Security (MSS)22 code.

Haitao had never met the man on the other end of the call and did not know his name. His tone, however, was unmistakable. Now was not the time for weakness or trepidation. Project JAVA-WAR was moving forward on schedule, and he was tasked with ensuring it stayed that way, at least in his Tucson café. Over the last two years, the Chinese government secretly built and franchised a chain of nouveau-riche cafés next to public universities in states that had legalized recreational marijuana. His café was an integral part of the MSS Project JAVA-WAR.

The MSS manager delivered Haitao’s instructions in short and clipped tones. His benefactors within MSS were well aware of the supply chain issues plaguing the delivery of sensitive packages due to America’s continued antagonistic posture toward Communist China. Hence, Haitao’s next “special” delivery would arrive via an untraceable human mule. An Ecuadorian national would cross the poorly secured MexicanAmerican border tomorrow into Nogales, Arizona, as a stowaway on a Union Pacific freight train. Once across the border, the human mule would pass the package to a diplomat from the Chinese Consulate General in Los Angeles at a predetermined drop site in Nogales. This Chinese national would, of course, have diplomatic immunity. Haitao would receive the package at the back entrance of his café two blocks from Arizona State University at approximately 2:30 p.m. The diplomat would then return immediately to Los Angeles. No words would be spoken between them. These were the standing MSS orders.

Haitao’s salary was paid in untraceable cryptocurrency by the MSS. Once the package was delivered, as with all prior deliveries, he would carefully pour the powder contained within the ziplock bag into the small box attached to the back of the “special” coffee dispenser at his Sun Tzu Café franchise. MSS agents only used the “special” coffee dispenser after they targeted a graduate student they wanted to interview in the café. Haitao would then burn the empty package and await further instructions. In thirty days, the MSS would direct another phone call to his MSS flip phone at precisely 2:30 p.m.

Haitao steeled himself and, in perfect Chinese, began with the statement, “们出现了问题We have another problem.” The MSS agent on the phone did not like problems and, as was his nature, spoke in simple and clipped tones, “解釋Explain.” Haitao hoped his voice would not waver and said, “We have had two incidents in the last week that I believe are related to the delivered packages. Both resulted in a brief police presence in my café and medical treatment for the graduate students involved. The students became delusional and violent and had to be subdued by one of your MSS baristas after drinking the coffee laced with the contents of your delivered packages.”


Free use image from Open Clipart Vectors

Ornery Owl's Review

Rating: 
Five out of Five Stars

Imagine going to grab a nice cup of coffee at a local bistro in a college town only to find yourself spiraling into a state of psychosis. This is what's happening to unsuspecting university students at select coffee houses where the brew is being spiked with potent hallucinogenic drugs as part of a Chinese plot to attack the United States. It sounds like the plot of a far-fetched espionage thriller. However, the plot isn't all that far-fetched, and certain branches of the United States government conducted such experiments on their own citizens over many decades. The most famous (or infamous) of these experiments went by the name of MKULTRA. Some of the characters in Sun Tzu's Cafe are creations of the author's imagination. Others are real historical figures. 

If you are looking for a fast-paced thriller with lots of steamy sex and even more explosions, this book will not fill the bill. There's only one big explosion and there are no steamy sex scenes. On the other hand, if you want to read an immersive story with real history that will scare the hell out of anyone with a conscience and a working brain, this is absolutely the story for you. Sun Tzu's Cafe is a tightly-written, well-researched story providing plenty of links to send readers down winding rabbit holes into real U.S. history. This book may leave the reader feeling unsettled while recalling the old mantra, "You aren't paranoid if they really are out to get you."

Who can you trust? Not the government. Maybe not even your local coffee shop. However, if you're someone who enjoys an intellectually stimulating story, you can trust this book to deliver.

About the Author



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Thursday, October 12, 2023

Sam Time Guest Post and Giveaway #GoddessFishPromotions

 


Sam Time

by Donna Balon

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GENRE: Historical Fiction, Time Travel

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BLURB:

When her fiancé is away on business, lonely Samantha Hunter despairs and absorbs herself in historical research. Her nighttime dreams being so vivid, Samantha believes she’s traveling to a past century. As she navigates the Victorian era rules of dos and even more don’ts, she charms Ulysses S Grant while struggling to maintain her present-day romance.

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Excerpt 

During the night, Samantha had a vivid dream. She was in a rural town wearing her Victorian-style dress. The weather was cool so she wrapped the crocheted afghan around her shoulders. And her sockless feet were cold in her slip-on shoes.

The few men she saw were in worn, soiled work clothes and walked with purpose. The so-called roadways were not paved but dirt paths. No cars or trucks, but horses and carts. A few wooden one-story buildings scattered here and there.

This must be a dream in which the clock has been turned back, Samantha thought. But where am I?

She strolled, aware she had not seen any other women. Pulling the afghan around herself snugly, she walked with her head tilted down to avoid catching the eye of any man in whatever this place was, glancing up often to learn more of her surroundings.

Then two women hurried toward her, each carrying a wooden bucket of water. Their cotton dresses hung to their ankles, with full skirts gathered at the waist of fitted bodices. Plain white cotton bonnets covered their heads, and shawls were wrapped around their shoulders. They looked at Samantha disapprovingly. Her dress was too fancy for this rural town. Moreover, she wasn’t wearing a bonnet or hat; a bare head was a means of solicitation by prostitutes. She hugged her body with the afghan, which served as a shawl to hide her uncorseted torso.

The dream seemed authentic. Despite her uneasiness, she thought, Enjoy the dream. If I don’t like it, I’ll wake myself up.

Around a corner, she spotted a few men in uniform. Soldiers. Maybe the army. This might be a small town next to an army fort, Samantha guessed. Still, not a good place for a woman.


Guest Post

Researching the Mid-19th Century

Time travel is implausible. Readers accept this untruth for the adventure of escaping to the past. As an author, I’m allowed this one lie. Everything else must be plausible so readers can enjoy the ride.

I read over two dozen books in researching the mid-19th century and my subject Ulysses S Grant. Grant’s and Julia’s memoirs and biographies provided much information, but other books filled in cultural details. No one book stood out as having everything needed. The norm was rather, I’d read over 300 pages to get a couple of nuggets. I summarize some of these nuggets below.


Roughing It, Mark Twain

I strived to write dialogue appropriate for this Victorian period. Roughing It is delightful and gave me hints of language usage. I discovered the word “greenswald”, which is a grassy area.


General John A. Rawlins, No Ordinary Man, Allen J Ottens

This is a biography of Grant’s chief of staff during the Civil War. From this book, I learned Grant typically had staff with him when he traveled on horseback.

In Sam Time when Grant rides on horseback to meet the protagonist Samantha, two staff officers trail him. As she watches the three men race out of town, Samantha is amazed and says, “This is the best vacation ever.”


Chloroform, The Quest for Oblivion, Linda Stratmann

In the acknowledgments the author thanks her husband for enduring “many months living with a woman whose sole topic of conversation appeared to be chloroform.” I laughed, feeling likewise, odd to be buying a book about this drug.


The Story of a Common Soldier of Army Life in the Civil War, Leander Stillwell

I used more tidbits from this book, which is in the public domain, than any other book. The author also saw Grant riding on horseback during the Civil War.


Manhunt, The 12-Day Chase for Lincoln’s Killer, James L. Swanson

This is in my top favorite nonfiction books. The inside cover displays the reward poster for the assassin of President Lincoln. It’s described in the Sam Time chapter “Mourning in D.C.”


Riding for Ladies with Hints on the Stable, Mrs. Power O’Donoghue

Equestrian women wore riding “habits” (clothes). Samantha wears riding clothes consistent with the descriptions in the book.


The Rise of Literacy and the Common School in the United States, A Socioeconomic Analysis to 1870, Lee Soltow and Edward Stevens

A literate population was a necessity for a young democratic nation. Although informal and sporadic, children often did learn to read, especially the bible.

In the early chapters of the book, Samantha meets the young Peyton sisters and asks them if they know A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens. They say “yes”, which is plausible.


The Corset, A Cultural History, Valerie Steele

This is the go-to book for everything about corsets. After reading this book, I concluded corsets during the 19th century performed the function of a 20th century brassiere. They were typically worn snug but not tight.


Manners and Morals of Victorian America, Wayne Erbsen

This is a handbook, the front cover of which includes a drawing of a man helping a woman descending a buggy. Victorians considered a woman’s waist an erogenous zone. The front cover illustration correctly displays the man holding onto the elbows of a woman—not her waist—as she rests her hands on his shoulders. In Sam Time, Samantha descends from of buggy with Grant’s help in this same manner.


All the Modern Convenience, American Household Plumbing 1840-1890

Maureen Ogle

I learned indoor plumbing and water closets were available to the in some cities and affluent areas in 1880. In Sam Time, Samantha visits the Grants at their Long Branch, New Jersey, beach home. The home would have had a water closet, and Samantha excuses herself to use it.



AUTHOR Bio and Links:

Author Donna Balon debuts Sam Time, a novel well-researched and professionally edited by quality talent from the publishing industry. Donna resides in Las Vegas, Nevada, with her husband.

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/41018186.Donna_Balon

Website: https://samtimebook.com/about/

Amazon: https://amazon.com/author/donnabalon

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Friday, April 28, 2023

Sub Tales Book Blitz #rabtbooktours

 

Poopie Suits Series, Book 7

 

History - US Submarine Force

Date Published: 12-09-2019

 

photo add-to-goodreads-button_zpsc7b3c634.png

 

Exhilarating true stories from the history of the US Submarine Force. Life threatening sudden emergencies, fearless rescues, famous skippers, innovative ingenuity while at sea, a unique baseball game at the North Pole, a man with an indomitable will to survive in WWII, and a lot more.

Organized by themes, you can read any story alone. An Audio Version has been narrated by a professional narrator who rode 6 subs himself.  The nuance, color, and sense of being there clearly comes out in this audio book. Since its inception, this book has been our Best Seller of our 7 books with true stories of the US Sub Force.  It has 329 Global Reviews on Amazon, 88% 4 or 5 Star. If you want to learn something about submarines, read or hear true stories of men in extremis, and want to know about the men who volunteered to ride them...This book/audio version is for you.

 

This book is highly acclaimed by both submarine veterans and civilians for his readibility, accuracy, and the content.

Ranked in Top 10 by Amazon of books of Cold War Genre.

Ranked in Top 10 in Best Submarine Books of All Time by the Book Authority

The audio book is convenient for those who drive a lot, have vision impairment, or just want to sit back and listen while they do other chores.

This book is a winner!

About the Author

Charles Hood is the principal author, aided by his submarine veteran brother Frank. Charles is a physician who started helping Frank write his story (Poopie Suits and Cowboy Boots) and then became so enamored of all things submarine, he has dedicated 7 years of his life to collecting, editing, and publishing these fabulous stories so that they are not lost to time.  These stories of the bravery, the mettle, the endurance of the men (and families) who volunteer to serve aboard a submarine will make you go "Wow".

 

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