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OverviewEvery Civil War veteran had a story to tell. But few stories top the one lived by Wright Stephen Batchelor. Like most North Carolina farmers, Batchelor eschewed slaveholding. He also opposed secession and war, yet he fought on both sides of the conflict. During his time in each uniform, Batchelor barely avoided death at the Battle of Gettysburg, was captured twice, and survived one of the war's most infamous prisoner-of-war camps. He escaped and after walking hundreds of miles, rejoined his comrades at Petersburg, Virginia, just as the Union siege there began. Once the war ended, Batchelor returned on foot to his farm, where he took part in local politics, supported rights for freedmen, and was fatally involved in a bizarre hometown murder. Michael K. Brantley's story of his great-great-grandfather's odyssey blends memory and Civil War history to look at how the complexities of loyalty and personal belief governed one man's actions - and still influence the ways Americans think about the conflict today. AUTHOR: Michael K. Brantley is the great-great-grandson of Wright Stephen Batchelor. He is an assistant professor of communications at Barton College in Wilson, North Carolina, and a former newspaper editor. He has published creative nonfiction, fiction, and poetry in numerous publications, including the First Day, Dunes Review, Broad River Review, WordRiver, and Broadkill Review. He is the author of Memory Cards: Portraits from a Rural Journey. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Michael K. BrantleyPublisher: Potomac Books Inc Imprint: Potomac Books Inc ISBN: 9781640121225ISBN 10: 1640121226 Pages: 208 Publication Date: 01 May 2020 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Homecoming 2. A Name in a Book 3. The Rip Van Winkle State 4. A New Life in the Face of an Approaching National Storm 5. My Civil War Past 6. Wright’s Enlistment and Early Campaigns 7. Bloodbaths at Gettysburg and Bristoe Station 8. The Home Front 9. POW Life Leads to Being Galvanized . . . and a Great Escape 10. Return and Reconstruction 11. Trouble about a “Yaller” Dog 12. On the Research Trail 13. Statues of Limitations 14. The Future of the Past Epilogue Notes Bibliography IndexReviewsAs the author's research reveals the journey of his great-great grandfather across Nash County and battlefields of the Civil War, Michael K. Brantley discovers that exploring the past reveals the explored but changes the explorer. A worthy literary effort! --Wade G. Dudley, author of Remembering North Carolina and Splintering the Wooden Wall-- (09/19/2019) Michael Brantley's Galvanized is a conscientious and sweeping hybrid narrative gathering together fragments of the author's personal history--that of his great-great-grandfather's life in nineteenth-century North Carolina--alongside elaborately researched accounts of the Civil War. When Brantley offers, 'These were the stories that had become interesting to me, the stories about real people, regular people, ' he focuses our attention on the plural, people, and reminds us how interconnected our histories are and forever will be. --Jon Pineda, author of Let's No One Get Hurt -- (09/19/2019) In this meticulously researched account, Michael Brantley weaves the fascinating history of his great-great-grandfather with his own present-day search to understand the complex and tangled issues of culture, place, and identity that divided our country during the Civil War and continue to divide us now. --Rebecca McClanahan, author of The Tribal Knot: A Memoir of Family, Community, and a Century of Change --Rebecca McClanahan (09/19/2019) 'The Civil War is just as complicated now as the day it started.' . . . Brantley deftly combines military and social history, a gripping narrative of one private soldier, and his personal struggle to make sense of a savage, fratricidal war and the morally fraught heritage that continues to haunt the South. --Philip Gerard, author of The Last Battleground and Cape Fear Rising -- (09/19/2019) Author InformationMichael K. Brantley is the great-great-grandson of Wright Stephen Batchelor. He is an assistant professor of communications at Barton College in Wilson, North Carolina, and a former newspaper editor. He has published creative nonfiction, fiction, and poetry in numerous publications, including the First Day, Dunes Review, Broad River Review, WordRiver, and Broadkill Review. He is the author of Memory Cards: Portraits from a Rural Journey. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |