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Ghost riders : a novel

Historical figure Malinda Blalock dresses as a boy so that she can join her husband in the Confederate Army during the Civil War and they eventually become do-gooder outlaws known throughout the Appalachians. The story is brought into the present by Civil War re-enactment actors camped out in the Appalachians, who are confronted with Civil War ghosts. It is up to locals Rattler and Nora Bonesteel to quell the ghosts' hostilities.

Book  - 2003
FIC McCru
1 copy / 0 on hold

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  • ISBN: 0525947183
  • Physical Description print
    333 pages : illustrations
  • Publisher New York : Dutton, [2003]

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note: Includes bibliographical references (pages 331-333).
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note:
LSC 37.50

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Summary for ISBN Number 0525947183
Ghost Riders
Ghost Riders
by McCrumb, Sharyn
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Summary

Ghost Riders


The New York Times bestselling author of She Walks These Hills and The Rosewood Casket returns with another sweeping novel that juxtaposes the legends of the Civil War with the lives of the modern-day mountain folk immortalized in her award-winning books. In 1861 the Civil War reached the mountainous South-where the enemy was your neighbor, the victims were your friends, and the wrong army was whichever one you joined. When Malinda Blalock's husband, Keith, joined the army, she dressed as a boy and went with him. They spent the war close to home in the North Carolina mountains, acting as Union guerrilla fighters, raiding the farms of the Confederate sympathizers and making as much trouble as they could locally. As hard-riding, deadly outlaws, Keith and Malinda avenged Confederate raids on their kin and neighbors. McCrumb also brings into her story the larger-than-life narrative of the historical political figure Zebulon Vance, a self-made man and Confederate governor, who was from the mountains and fought for the interests of Appalachia within the hierarchy of the Confederacy. Linking the forces of historical unrest with the present-day stories of mountain wisefolk Rattler and Nora Bonesteel, McCrumb weaves two overlapping narratives. It is up to Nora Bonesteel and Rattler to calm the Civil War ghosts who are still wandering the mountains, and prevent a clash between the living and the dead.