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Nonfiction/History
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ISBN: 978-1-60862-013-5
Edition: Paperback, 284 Pages
Publication Date: March 3, 2009
Whenever the name Boone is mentioned, the public
immediately thinks of the name “Daniel Boone”, and
associates it with exploration of unknown territory
by an early American frontiersman. However, Daniel was
not the only Boone who helped push the American frontier
from sea to shining sea. There seemed to be a natural
proclivity for exploration in the Boone family. They
were typically among the first to move into new regions
in search of land, adventure, and personal freedom. This
book traces the life of one of those “other” Boones,
Hezekiah Boone, son of George Boone IV, and the cousin
of Daniel Boone. In only two generations, Hezekiah and
his son Mordecai Boone moved their families from
Pennsylvania, through multiple locations in Virginia,
to Tennessee, Kentucky, Alabama, Mississippi, and
finally to Texas, where many of their descendents
remain. Affiliated family lines of Wigley, Burt, McGee,
Adams, Lane, Altizer, McGregor, Gibbons, Bustinza, and
Cavazos are also included.
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ISBN: 978-1-59824-888-3
Edition: Paperback, 66 Pages
Publication Date: January 20, 2009
To an American public opinion, anchored in the belief
that Islam is all Arab, “Understanding Islam - The
Persian Imprint” demonstrates it to be off the mark.
The truth is that Iran (the Persia of old) fractured
Islam’s identity twice: causing it to be non Arab,
first; and provoking its schism later.
Further, the World identifies Islamic Men of Science,
and their stellar achievements, as Arab whereas, in
fact, they were all Persian and Turkomen.
A book whose time has come.
Price: $13.95
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ISBN: 978-1-59824-945-3
Edition: Paperback, 139 Pages
Publication Date: October 30, 2008
Before the White Man, the discovery and exploration by
Hernando de Soto, landing at Port Charlotte, Florida in
1539, until after the Second Creek War of 1836.
The Principal Chiefs of the Confederacy, with their
portraits, are covered. (The Upper Towns - War Towns,
known as “Red Sticks” and the Lower Towns - Peace Towns,
known as White Towns). Full descriptions of the Muscogee
Peoples, the Creeks, with emphasis on their physical
appearance, life, habits, ceremonies, dress, communities,
customs and symbols. Their own political intrigues with
ever-encroaching Spain, Britain, France and the New
Colonists.
A Glossary on Muscogee Words and Spanish Words. Maps.
The Battle at Horseshoe Bend with Andrew Jackson and his
Tennessee Militia, Cherokee and Creek allies against
Menawa and his “Red Stick” Creek warriors. The
adventurer William A. Bowles, British Loyalist, who
settled in among the Creeks in then Spanish north
Florida and became their Director General; his capture
of Fort Marks and wars in West Florida, taking scalps.
This is not “a book.” It is an adventure.
Price: $10.95
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ISBN: 978-1-59824-922-4
Edition: Paperback, 147 Pages
Publication Date: September 22, 2008
Eight men served as President of the United States
between Andrew Jackson and Abraham Lincoln and all
eight have been forgotten. William Henry Harrison and
John Tyler are two of them. Harrison only served a
month in office and Tyler died as a member of the
Confederate Congress and this has ruined their
historical reputations. But no presidency has been
irrelevant in American History and Harrison and Tyler
have a story to tell. This book brings their ignored
presidencies to life.
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ISBN: 978-1-59824-825-8
Edition: Paperback, 79 Pages
Publication Date: June 3, 2008
No History is as convoluted as is Egypt’s.
A foreign religion, Islam, and a foreign language,
Arabic, neither of which she wanted, fractured her
identity. She claims to be Arab. Which she is not.
Governed by foreign rulers since Alexander, no
native-born assumed power till Nasser in 1953.
The recipient of USA free wheat for a population of
65 million: forecast to reach the 100 level come
3001.
Price: $23.95
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ISBN: 978-1-59824-742-8
Edition: Paperback, 545 Pages
Publication Date: February 21, 2008
Michael John Fitzgerald - From Immigrant to Officer in the Indian Fighting Army
The story of Michael Fitzgerald is the story of a
nine-year-old Irish boy who traveled across the Atlantic
without his parents to live in the slums of Baltimore.
At the age of seventeen, young Michael enlisted in the
Army at Fort McHenry and began a military life that
would take him to key areas of America’s growth. He
was a young Army private in the Artillery sloshing
through the Florida Everglades in the Third Seminole
War. He and his family were held prisoners by the
rebellious mob in Charleston, South Carolina after Major
Anderson fled with the folks at Fort Moultrie to Fort
Sumter. For his efforts as a field medic he became a
hospital steward and helped care for the thousands of
men wounded and killed at Antietam. For his actions in
Frederick during this time he became a commissioned
officer, serving on the West Coast and the Great Plains.
During his career he married four wives, the first two
in the frontier wilderness.
Michael Fitzgerald was a witness and participant in
American History. This book follows Michael’s life and
directs our attention to how and where his life
intersected with the making of America.
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ISBN: 978-1-59824-759-6
Edition: Paperback, 129 Pages
Publication Date: January 11, 2008
Reminiscences of a group of school girls growing up in
Germany during WWII, including the naivety, fellowship
and propaganda of grade school Hitler Youth camps,
growing disillusion during the war, hardships and
survival within total destruction at the end, and the
search for an education after the war.
Price: $12.95
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ISBN: 978-1-59824-749-7
Edition: Paperback, 161 Pages
Publication Date: January 1, 2008
Like every American president, Andrew Jackson’s legacy
is up for debate. In this book I try to put aside
personal bias and preconceived notions to give a fair
look at Jackson’s eight turbulent years in the White
House. In doing so I found there were two different
Jacksons. There was the traditional Jackson who won the
Bank War and thwarted nullification and then there was
the unsure and sensitive Jackson who craved friendship
and loyalty. Historians have described Jackson as
everything from a criminal dictator to heroic patriot.
I’ll let you judge where the truth lies.
Price: $8.95
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ISBN: 978-1-59824-753-4
Edition: Paperback, 53 Pages
Publication Date: December 20, 2007
Come to the Catskills for three days of peace and music.
That’s how the Woodstock Festival was advertised to sell
tickets.
What the promoter expected was a crowd of 10,000 to
50,000 people. But what came to Woodstock was not what
they expected. A crowd of more than 500,000 people
showed up. This book is a behind the scenes look at
what went on at the Woodstock ‘69 Festival.
Price: $12.95
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ISBN: 978-1-59824-725-1
Edition: Paperback, 188 Pages
Publication Date: October 29, 2007
There are millions of words that have been written on
the divisive history of the War Between the States,
commonly referred to as, “The Civil War.” Thousands of
stories have been placed in book form.
Robert S. Heflin lived a truly remarkable life at a time
in our country’s development and change which required a
special courage, a steadfast and resolute commitment.
It was his country, above all else, that he pledged to
support. He felt it to be his duty. At risk were the
bonds of love and the nurturing of his wife and children,
his father and mother, his brothers and sisters and his
friends and neighbors.
It was the Union of the United States for which he
risked all of this. It was for more than honor; much
more.
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