"Wonderful historical tale inside a fun contemporary investigation"
Many Harvard men died at the Battle of Gettysburg as part
of the valiant 2nd Massachusetts Volunteers and in fact the
university honors these heroes with a memorial hall listing
them. However, not everyone behaved courageously as Mary
Kelly tells her husband, Homer, a professor at the school.
Her great-great grandfather Seth Morgan apparently
deserted, but though her family refuses to talk about his
cowardly behavior, Mary needs to know the truth about Seth. Mary and Homer begin their investigation into her roots by
visiting her sister Gwen, who lives in the ancestral home
where family items have been stored for years in the
attic. They learn that third cousin removed Ebenezer Flint
took everything while Gwen and her husband was away.
Deciding to continue their quest, Mary and Homer visit the
college archives and follow that up with a trip to
Gettysburg. From there they go to DC to visit Ebenezer as
a story unfolds of cowardice, treachery, and murder on the
eve of the pivotal Civil War battle. Though the prime plot is the modern day inquiries into the
Morgan family roots, intermingling throughout the tale is a
superb subplot focusing on the key characters involving
what happened to Seth. Thus, readers, once adjusted to the
flashbacks, receive two delightful tales, of which either
could have stand-alone. The prime protagonists, past and
present, come through as genuine so that the audience
receives a wonderful historical tale inside a fun
contemporary investigation into that past. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted May 10, 2003
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