Showing posts with label historical fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label historical fiction. Show all posts

Monday, October 15, 2018

"Winter Eternal" by E. Thomas Joseph

EXCERPT
Winter Eternal Book 1:
The River that Flows Two Ways
by E. Thomas Joseph

Winter Eternal Book 1: The River that Flows Two Ways by E. Thomas Joseph

Author E. Thomas Joseph joins me today to share an excerpt from Winter Eternal Book 1: The River that Flows TwoWays.

Description
In 1777, Captain Isaac Pearson joined the British Army when he believed the Colonial Rebellion would be dispatched with effortless haste. Taking a few American lives was an agreeable price for the pampered aristocrat who believed his actions in the conflict would afford him honor and glory. Yet, the path Captain Pearson rode was neither honorable or glorious and the price he would pay was beyond his imaginable fortunes.
Time is the enemy of all, the hunter of the hunters whom no measures of tenacity or weaponry can defeat. Yet, in the early days of America’s war for independence Phantom Regiments, ruthless shadow units, British Redcoats, American militia and crazed men of the occult race to acquire a mysterious Iroquoian artifact which offers the capacity to defeat time. Set in New York’s Hudson Valley, the contest for time will marshal tragic desperation and horrific ends. Winter Eternal, uncovered from layers of dust, deep within the archives of America’s Untold History is the tales of the soldiers and the citizens who sell their souls to pursue the mysterious Native talisman, the Kahontsi Ehnita; the Giver of Life … A revolutionary war has begun.


Excerpt
Prologue
NOVEMBER 1755.
The northeastern wilderness had already begun its winter rest. A thin layer of wet snow gave way to patches of brown-green grass. Fallen leaves, dull, russet, and drained of all autumnal brilliance wisped about aimlessly. Each of the many rigid, tangled tree limbs reached for the dark gray sky to appear as shattered glass over the backdrop of the colorless heavens. Steadily, tiny flakes of snow were blown sidelong with the passing wind, as it hummed and fought its way through the thicket of branches. A creek lay to the west and flowed gently from the northwest, a shallow tributary of the Mohawk River. Under a thin blanket of mist, its gray water gently cast small ripples on the shore. Along the western horizon, the rolling Catskills were stripped of life and color, white and gray with snow, they bristled with leafless trees watching over the landscape. The creek flowed slowly in a shallow valley; an embankment supported a trail, several yards in width, which ran parallel to the water on the west and a dense forest of evergreens, oaks, elms, and maples, to the east.
A wandering buck lingered casually and approached along the partially frozen, muddied trail for a drink. The handsome beast trotted toward the bank, where he stood amongst the large stones and hardened soil along the river, his antlers tall and proud. He was thinner than he should be, aged to have seen most of his years already passed. His hide was patchy, dull brown and gray, and his eyes were expressionless black pearls. For years he and his kind had roamed the temperate countryside. Never had they laid claim to the land, spoiled nor polluted any of its beauty. For all his magnificence, he was a silent, peaceful creature, a grazer, and wanderer. He looked around as if fondly taking in the natural beauty of his surroundings. He drank from the river, before roaming deeper into darkness.
A faint clap began to draw near. He lifted his head eastward, facing the direction of the rumbling. Without hesitation, he raced into the forest, sprinting along the river way to the west. With each stride, his gallop grew softer, replaced by a rolling, thundering rumble that became louder as it neared.
Three riders, each astride impressive stallions, traveling from the south, revealed themselves and clamored along the same trail with a quickened gallop. Snowflakes melted upon their cheeks, but they remained focused as they moved forward. The warm mist of the horses’ breath billowed alongside as the column hurriedly marched along. All the steeds were clad with forest green blankets adorned with gold and white embroidery, various straps, harnesses, pouches, and canisters that rattled as they galloped forward. Each rider had a haversack draped across the saddle and mounted on the left shoulder, a long “dragon” flintlock musket, and accompanying pistol. The riders sat tall and assured, appearing taller still in part for their signature black Tarleton helmets. A black plume of feathers ran along the top, from front to back, then continued as a tail for some ten to twelve inches behind the soldiers’ backs. The middle horseman had a distinctive peak, ornamented with white goose feathers. They each wore heavy crimson waistcoats with a large, horizontal white striped placket from collar to bottom. Green and gold inlays marked the shoulders, collars, and cufflinks, a white leather belt, clipped with a gold clasp, and coattails behind. The harnesses around their chests met at a gilded plaque with “IV” etched into its surface. Below the inscription, a rare black beryl and ruby gemstone cross sword and crown insignia were embedded. Sturdy white pantaloons were embellished with a forest green stripe running vertically on the leg. Heavy, black leather boots with silver-plated spurs, buttoned and laced, sealed with rugged white canvas sleeves along the calf. Along their left hip was the polished brass handles atop long sabers, which rested in their scabbards. Tassels hung from the mouth of each scabbard, the middle rider’s being braided white rope, the flanking riders’ black. These were the unmistakable and unique markings of the enigmatic Fourth Order of Aquitaine Light Horse Guards of the Royal Dragoons.
The Fourth Dragoons had earned a reputation for tenacity and ruthlessness through several conflicts for the King and Country. As such, they enjoyed preferred status amongst the Ministry and were never wasted on open combat or trivial operations. Equally formidable on a horse, dismounted as a musketeer, or as a piquet warrior, the Fourth Royal Order was not often seen entering or leaving a battlefield, yet their paths could be traced along wakes of desolation. Rumors of their nature and origins had spread like wildfire within the Empire’s army. The most sensible gossip suggested each of these dragoons was nothing short of the most skilled and disciplined soldier, personally selected by the king himself. Reasonable men had insisted their existence to be nothing more than myth, legend, or some manner of exaggeration intent to inspire terror and submission before His Majesty’s enemies. And credence could be rightfully granted to such speculations, given the unusually ambiguous accounts of their formal obligations and whereabouts in wartime operations. Others called the Dragoons the “specters,” shadowy, supernatural archangels of the Almighty—the deadly protectors of the faith. Their mystery and intrigue had only grown as haunting tales of ghosts and demons amongst the king’s men. The Ministry did nothing to disclaim such myths, nor did it discourage their propagation.
The three horsemen proceeded some two hundred yards along the trail as it climbed a small knoll through a gap between two large rock formations. Trotting briskly, they headed toward a thin tower of blackish smoke that bent and rose toward the sky. The lead rider remained no more than a pace ahead of the others. Until he pulled back on the reins and slowed to a near stop when they reached a clearing at the apex of the hill, where a gathering of structures and figures appeared. They were mostly surrounded by a treeless stretch of ground, which revealed furloughs, gardened patches, and tree stumps. At the far end of what would seem to be an archaic village was an unfinished wall of oak logs roughly twelve-foot-high, mounted side by side, each with pointed tips carved atop. The partition began at the northern corner of the encampment, snaked toward the west, then back toward the south, where it ended unfinished near a pile of logs that lay on the ground. The barricade resembled a crescent moon that partially encircled the encampment. Twenty-plus paces behind the incomplete bulwark was an abrupt cliff, dropping some fifty feet or so toward the river valley. From the edge of the precipice, one could see the creek winding amongst the trees.
Three longhouses, mud-clay structures, with curved roofs, wooden supports, and narrow arched entrances were positioned almost congruent to one another. The largest was positioned farthest north and was approximately six feet tall and thirty feet long. It stretched east to west, as did its two, slightly less impressive, counterparts. Various symbols appeared painted along the structures: a black turtle, deer, bear, and a red painted bird among other such animals. A fourth, smaller structure of similar design rested apart from the others to the east. A lone white maple towered in the near center of the village, and pottery, baskets, blankets, and tools of assorted manner lay about without apparent organization. Several large animal skins, resembling those of bears and deer, were stretched flat and bound to frames made from thick tree branches and rested amongst the buildings’ walls. Smoke rose from a dying fire, and the snow continued to lightly fall as three canines angrily barked toward the oncoming horsemen.
A score or more of men, women, and children sat, side by side, in a circular pattern. Most had their arms wrapped around both knees, and all were silent and still. They were a clan of the woodland Iroquois, a people who had lived in these lands for centuries. The Iroquois were mostly nomads who roamed the countryside. After settling, an Iroquois tribe could count on surviving two or three generations before needing to wander again in search of food. This tribe had settled along the creek in the past summer, after being driven out of their eastern home by American settlers. Their manner of dress consisted of deerskin or rough leather blankets, skirts, smocks, sashes, and moccasins. All were embellished with regalia of beads, fringes, jewelry and stitching of varying sort. Some wore differing types of feathered headdresses or bands.
Clad in similar garb to the riders, with cardinal-red waistcoats, nine soldiers stood, spaced several feet apart, in what appeared to be a formal column, alongside the huddled Iroquois. Their appearance seemed more functional than their mounted counterparts. Each had a circular canteen strewn along his back, leather pouches along his waist sides, and a short, cylindrical container strapped to his belt along the small of his back. Each of the soldiers dared not flinch or utter a sound. They were steadfastly focused, dutifully resting long, bayoneted muskets, butts at their feet, up to and over their left shoulders with the muzzles facing skyward.
[Want more? Click below to read a longer excerpt.]


Praise for the Book
“Enormous and smart ... a grand epic tale ... crammed with characters unbelievably alive across the great gulf of war ... touches all human emotion love and hate, loyalty and treachery, hope and despair. See for yourself. This is truly a novel to get lost in.” ~ Book Review Concierge
“If our history books were only like this! E. Thomas Joseph takes American history on a wicked and disturbing journey in Winter Eternal. Historical fiction really isn't my genre, but the mixture of history and fantasy ... Joseph writes it with enough prowess to grab your attention and pull you in his morbid historical tale.” ~ Janny C
“I found it interesting and clever how the story weaves history with fictional fantasy. At times it can be a bit dark and gruesome even, but that is somewhat balanced by the touches of the light-hearted.” ~ Amazon Customer
“Wicked!!!!! I mean wow!!!! I am literally chewing on my nails. I do not know some authors can write like this.” ~ seasongirl09

About the Author
E. Thomas Joseph is an award-winning historian and Professor of U.S. History in Westchester County New York. Thomas Joseph sits on the board of the Thomas Paine Historical Society and the Historical Society of America’s Forbidden History, has presented at the Lincoln Center, the Cornelius Van Wyck Historical Site, and the Bunker Hill Club.
His fantasy tale, Winter Eternal, is part a fictionalized account of this dissertation on the Revolutionary War and New York’s Hudson Valley and is, in part, based on his research from the Archives of America’s Unknown History.

Links


Monday, July 17, 2017

"Seven Sisters" by M. L. Bullock

FREE
Seven Sisters
(Seven Sisters Book 1)
by M. L. Bullock


Seven Sisters, the first book in M. L. Bullock's Seven Sisters series, is FREE for a limited time. The author stops by to share an excerpt. Also available: Moonlight Falls on Seven Sisters, Shadows Stir at Seven Sisters, The Stars that Fell, The Stars We Walked Upon, and The Sun Rises Over Seven Sisters.



  
Description
Carrie Jo has a secret - she dreams about the past. The handsome and wealthy Ashland Stuart has hired her to uncover the history and the secrets of Seven Sisters, an aging antebellum mansion in sultry downtown Mobile, Alabama. A series of dreams, an untimely death and the betrayal of someone she loves lead her back in time to uncover the truth about a missing young heiress and a web of secrets.
Will Carrie Jo slip into the shadows of Seven Sisters, following in the ghostly footsteps of the lost young woman, or can she solve this tragic mystery and find her own happiness? 

Excerpt
I took my soup to my desk, fetched myself a silver soup spoon and sat down to enjoy my lunch. Calpurnia smiled back at me from the computer screen, and I stared at her. “Where are you, Callie?” I nearly jumped out of my chair when Bienville meowed outside my door. I had not seen the big cat climb the stairs, but there he was, peeking through the screen, no doubt wanting to cool off. I laughed at the fat little thing and opened the door for him. He came in and sat beside me at the desk, lounging happily on the area rug. I rubbed his fat tummy and turned my attention to the book. I remembered my antibiotics and took them with a bottle of water. I loved the soup—once again, Ashland had come through for me. You know, I should do something nice for him. Maybe cook him something. I can’t cook, but Bette could probably teach me something—something simple—like spaghetti! Yes, that’s it! I got so excited about the idea that I almost left immediately to go see her.
I finished off my soup and cleaned up my mess. It was time to read again. I was getting closer to the truth—I just knew it! I settled down for a few hours of work. Classical music played softly in the kitchen, and I closed my eyes, enjoying the peacefulness in my apartment. I felt peace seeing my old blue car in the driveway. There was nothing like freedom—and that’s exactly what Calpurnia didn’t have. I sighed and turned to the next page.
Dear Diary,
Father’s absence brings hope and peace. He takes with him the Shadows that Steal the Joy from Seven Sisters and all those who call her home. Oh, Sweet Mary! Is it wrong to pray for my tormentor’s death? I dare not ask Father England, the priest who came to visit, although he is a kind man who was genuinely fond of my mother. Once, Father England served this family exclusively, but not so anymore. Father refused to support the work of the ministry or provide him with any recommendations into our society.
“May that priest be damned for lying to us all!” he had shouted in a rage after the death of his son. Now the small chapel, the one with the stained glass windows, stood empty and forlorn, like my Father’s broken faith.
Once my Father had cut a handsome figure in his coat and tails, but now his bitterness, his unrelenting anger with God, stole that away from him. He was gone now—and he had taken the storm with him. The slaves whispered about him, although they would not dare do so to me. I was his daughter and heir to this place. This trip, so the story went, was an effort to collect the many debts he was owed from renters and sharecroppers. Their debts to him would be paid by their blood if they did not deliver what he wanted. Before his departure, he crept up and down the halls of the house looking like a wild man, Early ever beside him. Father tore apart nearly every room looking for my Mother’s Fortune, which I pretended to know nothing about. Ignorance and ignorance alone had previously saved me from his wrath; why should now be any different?
I would take this time to find that treasure, if it was the last thing I did, but I needed a companion, someone I could trust to keep my secret and help me cover the grounds. Of course, my mind first turned to dear, sweet Muncie, my Only True Friend, but nay. I could not place him in so grave a danger. He could die for helping me! It would be the same for Hooney, and she was old and more my Mother’s slave than my Father’s property. By reading a few of my Mother’s papers, I had discovered that all the house slaves now legally belonged to me. I could do with them what I wished, once I was married. How ridiculous a law it was! A woman could own a house or a slave, but she had to have the permission of her husband to manage either of them. I prayed that one day I would be free of such selfish laws, but I didn’t know how that would come to pass.
[Want more? Click below to read a longer excerpt.]


Praise for the Book
"I love historical fictions and this book fits the bill. I am excited to read the sequel. M. L. Bullock's book has me wondering where Carrie Joe's adventure will take her. ~ Karena Broadhead
"Five Stars! Loved this book! Definite page turner! Mystery, love, scandal! Can't wait for more!" ~ Amber A. Busby
"Enjoyed this book. A fun read that will leave you wondering. Can't wait for sequel!" ~ Jacqueline McNeal
"Awesome! Creative and interesting characters with intrigue and romantic setting. First book that has held my interest in years. The depth of character development, descriptive setting and flow from past to present stories kept my attention to the end. Looking forward to the next installment." ~ Karen L
"Great read! I loved this book. I'm from Mobile and the historical points were as entertaining as the mystery. Can't wait for the next book!!" ~ Glorimae

About the Author
Author of the best-selling Seven Sisters series, M. L. Bullock has been storytelling since she was a child. Born in Antigua, British West Indies, she has had a lifelong love affair with beaches and island life. She currently lives on the Gulf Coast and regularly haunts her favorite hangout, Dauphin Island. A visit to Historic Oakleigh House in Mobile, Alabama inspired her successful supernatural suspense Seven Sisters series.







Links



Friday, November 4, 2016

"The Tale of Nefret" by M. L. Bullock

EXCERPT
The Tale of Nefret
(The Desert Queen Book 1)
by M. L. Bullock


Author M. L. Bullock stops by today to share an excerpt from The Tale of Nefret, the first book in The Desert Queen series. Also available: The Falcon Rises and The Kingdom of Nefertiti. Coming December 2016: The Song of the Bee Eater.



For another book by this author, please check out my blog post on Seven Sisters.

Description
Explore the Legend of Nefertiti!
Twin daughters of an ancient Bedouin king struggle under the weight of an ominous prophecy that threatens to divide them forever. Royal sibling rivalry explodes as the young women realize that they must fight for their future and for the love of Alexio, the man they both love. The Tale of Nefret chronicles their lives as they travel in two different directions. One sister becomes the leader of the Meshwesh while the other travels to Egypt as an unwilling gift to Pharaoh.
From the desert to the throne room, The Tale of Nefret is the first book in The Desert Queen series, the fictional story of Nefertiti, Queen of Egypt.

Excerpt
Prologue
Egypt - 18th Dynasty
Farrah stood outside the door of the tent and stared up into the night sky. No matter how heavily time etched cruel marks on her face, the view grabbed her breath as if her dark eyes were seeing it for the first time. The lines on her brown face deepened as she pursed her lips. The air around her was pregnant with the future, but her inner sight was dark and full of mystery. Her limited insight into the other world made her uncomfortable. She made the sign of peace to the Dancing Man that hung above her in purple-blackness as he rose above the tribal camp. The Cushite traders called the Dancing Man a different name—Osiris he was called in the Black Lands and beyond—but here in the Red Lands where the red sands swirled and swam about the desert people like a dead ocean, he was known as the Dancing Man.
How long will we travel this path? An endless caravan moving from one rain oasis to another? Many of the clan no longer know from whence they came or that there had once been a place for them. How many Meshwesh must die in the Red Lands before we see those white walls again?
Once the Meshwesh dwelled in a city of white stone, Zerzura. What a city it had been! Farrah could barely remember the feeling of cool stones under her feet, the tastes of orange fruit sweet on her tongue, and the many pools of clear blue water that her young body had swum in. Had it been just a dream? No, Farrah remembered the day when the cowardly old king, Onesu, had fled the city ahead of the horde of giants who rushed in to claim it. But he had not lived one day after he left Zerzura, for Farrah had cut his throat while he slept. When he awoke to see her face above him, she whispered why she had done it as she watched him bleed. He had lost the city and had abandoned Ze, his queen and Farrah’s sister, leaving her to the pleasure of the giants who no doubt raped her to death. Farrah shuddered inwardly thinking of what she had done. Nobody knew, yet it was a spot on her soul. She did not regret it, although the gods had seen fit to take her inner sight from her as punishment for her crime. That had been long, long ago. His face no longer haunted her. Yet often she imagined she heard Ze’s screams in the clear night.
Now, with a silent prayer Farrah considered again the stars above her. Regardless of the constellation’s name, this sour omen was an inauspicious sign for the birth of a royal child, but there was nothing she could do to prevent it. Even her magic could not stop a child who wanted to enter this realm.
Farrah suddenly felt old. Had she, leader of the Council of Old Ones, become too old to consider the deeper meaning of such things? Was she too old to help bring another baby into this increasingly difficult world? The sounds the mother made, the painful moaning, the calling of her name, let Farrah know that she indeed still had a purpose. She took a deep sigh, breathing in the warm desert air and shaking off the unseen trepidation. She tossed her head cloth to the ground. No heads covered this night. She smiled peacefully as she walked to the birthing bed and looked down into the face of the beautiful Kadeema.
What a beauty the young queen had been when she first arrived here as the bride to Semkah! However, the Red Lands had sapped away her pretty softness like it did to all women who were not of true Red Lands’ blood. She had become hard, hard like the clay that lay beneath the rough sand. Kadeema’s olive skin was no longer pale but red, and her hair no longer like bright copper but dark and dull. The young queen’s eyes still had their sea-green beauty, but the sparkle, the joy of love and living, had faded. A wife of a young tribal king tied to the Red Lands people only by the most tenuous of threads—love. Farrah looked into those eyes, saddened to see that where there had been hope and excitement, there was now fear and regret.
[Want more? Click below to read a longer excerpt.]


Praise for the Book
"Amazing! Best book to date from Bullock book yet. You get caught up in the characters and story almost from the first page. The book stands alone but definitely begs for the next book to come soon. Every character breathes from the moment they walk into a scene, and you can't help but be invested in the outcome of their lives. The desert of Egypt is just another bonus, you can feel the heat and the sand as you read and the visits to the cool oases are just as soothing. This is worth your time, I finished it in one day." ~ Amazon Customer
"I cannot wait till book two. At first I did not think in would like it, it did not take long to love it!!!" ~ Danielle
"Ready for next book could not put down had to finish today. Kept me on edge of my seat." ~ Lula McCaa
"A very fast paced and exciting historical novel. I'm now hooked on the author. I received this book at no charge from Amazon for Kindle. I enjoyed the read, and thank the author for generously offering the work at no cost." ~ NinaS
"Loved it ... so sad the next book isn't out and I can't find when it will be. I like the time period in Egyptian History and its nice for it to be told from a different point of view." ~ Amazon Customer

About the Author
Author M. L. Bullock enjoys the laid-back atmosphere and the spooky vibe of the Gulf Coast, especially the region's historic districts and sites. When she isn't visiting her favorite haunts in New Orleans or Old Mobile, you can find her flipping through old photographs or newspaper clippings in search of new inspiration.






Links

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

"Death Steppe" by Judy Bruce

GUEST POST and REVIEW
Death Steppe:
A World War II Novel
by Judy Bruce


This is the first in a special series on author Judy Bruce. Today we feature Death Steppe: A World War II Novel. You can read an excerpt from the book, my review, and a guest post by Judy, giving us an insight into this World War II story.

Description
This World War II novel takes place in 1944, during Germany’s retreat from the western Soviet Union. The story follows the lives of a Russian war widow, Elena, a dissident, Christian, and black marketeer, as she serves as a medic on the front lines, and a disillusioned German lieutenant, Halder, a former professor and concentration camp officer, as he fights in a losing effort. In time, Elena and others, are forced into service as temporary navigators in an all-female regiment to the Red Army air force. After Elena’s plane crashes, she finds the injured Halder from the squadron she helped bomb. As enemies, the injured Elena and Halder alternate between helping and nearly killing each other. Eventually, the desperate soldiers discover an unexpected bond. Together they embark on a turbulent journey as lovers and disheartened deserters.

Excerpt
Chapter 1
Was I on my way to death? The possibility made my heart race. Breathing deeply to calm myself, I caught a heavy dose of truck exhaust as it wafted into the boxcar, mixing with the man-stink of a dozen filthy soldiers. The pitching movement of the train mocked the upheaval in my stomach—at every station the train jerked to a stop then lurched forward at departure, roiling and churning my insides at every jolt.
What the hell was I doing here? Yes, I believed in hell because I believed in God—which a good communist wasn’t supposed to do—and did my best to be a bad one. I really hated bullshit, so living the U.S.S.R. was excruciating, as if Soviet Socialism was a dull knife stabbed into my guts since childhood, always twisting and digging deeper. If I’d been the screaming sort, I would have let one loose. In this boxcar, I felt like a caged rebel—yet, I was too proud to permit anyone to know the extent of my disgust and despair.
As I stewed over my circumstances, I twirled a clump of my wavy hair over the index finger of my left hand. To distract myself from the rim of the barrel cutting into the back of my legs, I shifted my attention to the only other woman in the boxcar full of Red Army soldiers, an early-graying woman of thirty-five or so, who stood at the other end of the car, biting her nails. What was her story? Was she going someplace scary? Suddenly, a hard turn made me bash my head on the wall. Once I succeeded in stifling a grimace and righting myself on the barrel again, I gripped my satchel more tightly, mindful that each day I clutched at a fistful of life. Now, as the train charged onward, I felt my grasp weakening; the little control I possessed over my life was pouring through the gaps in my fingers.
***
After another hour, the train labored to a stop at a station. When several rowdy Russian soldiers climbed into the boxcar, the floorboards creaked with the extra weight. With the addition of more strangers, I ached with longing to be back home with my family—what was left of them—sitting around the kitchen table with a cup of sugary tea, listening to a story from my papa, and laughing with my mama. But those people and that possibility became more remote with each frigid, snow-covered mile. Every day would be a fight; if I was to get back to them I needed to survive in this new unknown. 
The boisterous soldiers jostled each other like schoolboys, until one by one they fell silent as they noted the grim silence of the haggard veterans. When the soldier next to me said, “Not one step back,” I thought he meant to mock Stalin’s grand order, but then I understood the soldier merely cautioned a boarding rider not to back into the corner where the urine bucket sat. The newcomer had on a uniform—new, with the creases still denting the stiff, manure-colored pants. The young soldier nodded at the warning, then, like many others, stared out at the nothingness of the open land through the gap in the wall, a crude window with bars that kept the box car cold and lessened the odor of urine and grimy men. After a couple of moments, I realized I knew that voice. I quickly studied his face. He paused then returned my gaze.
“It is very cold,” he said.
“Yes, it is,” I said.
The soldier nodded then we looked away from each other. Angered by my lack of diligent observation, my face flushed hot. Clearly, I should have recognized him earlier and kept my distance. Wondering what his name was, I felt sad that I only knew him as “19,” his black market code name. By necessity, our dealings had been simply business in nature, without a word of pleasantry beyond a stiff greeting. My last sight of him took place at one of my clandestine Bible studies, four or five months ago. Though no one knew who had arranged it, 19 had arrived at the supposedly secret meeting with a box full of Bibles. The sum of four of the purchases became my commission. Although I knew we would never speak or acknowledge each other again, I hoped he had a family that cared for him and wished him well. Venturing a glance over at his hands, which were chapped and creased with dirt, I realized I had only seen him in the darkness or by distant lamplight. Now that I had seen him clearly, I concluded his family observed Shabbat, lit the menorah, and had probably observed the mourning period of shiva more than once.   
***
Later that morning, the train jolted the passengers as it began to brake for the station. Soon after the train lurched to a stop, my guts cart wheeled when someone unlocked the doors from the outside. Why the hell did those communist bastards lock us in? I had been caged. But I needed to keep my wits. If I ever stopped thinking, I’d be lost—that’s when they take over. Then I’ll be a sheep like the rest of these louts. 
“Medics disembark!”
Lugging my suitcase, I worked my way through the train car and into a wind so raw it caught my breath and numbed my thoughts. I followed a group of men and women to a gray, pre-fabricated building. A half hour later, I stood in a room full of wobbly bunk beds made of splintery wood and gray metal lockers that failed to lock. First, I stared at the thick-soled, black boots I had just laced; then I ran my hand over the coarse wool of the manure-brown shirt and pants of the infantry. I had entered another life—one of frightening danger and menacing uncertainty. Don’t stop thinking.
A pair of heavy boots stopped outside in the hall, breaking into my thoughts. A stout man in his mid-thirties, with dark tousled hair, another medic-in-training, glanced in at me. I snatched up my coat and helmet then headed for the hallway, now bustling with civilians awkward in their stiff military garb.
“My name is Boris Surkov,” he said.
“Elena Nevskaya.”
“Where did you come from?”
Moscow.”
“I’m from Smolensk. The city hospital there. Strange, they bring me out here to train in combat then they’ll send me back to the same city.”
“Nobody’s told me where I’m going or when.”
We stepped outside into the sting of cold and the chaos of training camp. I tried and failed to find some method in the tumult of groups dashing from one station then to another. The frightened looks on their faces made obvious the fact these were medics, not people meant for battle. Were they even meant to be medics? Was I? Fear welled up in my throat and stuck like gravel. Think. Breathe. Think.
“Well, you’re no nurse,” said Surkov.
Annoyed by the persistent stranger, I asked, “Why do you say that?”
“They keep the nurses in the hospitals. They don’t give them guns.”
I nodded. “I’m a literature professor with a little medical training.”
In truth, I remained livid that they had yanked me out of the classroom to be trained on cleaning bedpans in a hospital then sent to combat training for some unknown destination. Yet, I must not give myself away; perhaps this man was earnestly full of Marxist bullshit. And worse, he was obviously an extrovert—a person who would act like a close friend one day then forget your name the next day when someone more interesting came along.
Within a few minutes, a group of us knelt in the snow, practicing loading and unloading our rifles and revolvers. As soon as the supervising officer moved away, Surkov caught my attention with a wave. He tossed something metal to me. I reached into the snow and located a flask. After I yanked off the stopper, I sniffed hard. Oh, yes, vodka. Waiting until the closest officers had both turned their backs, I swigged the alcohol. I closed my eyes and felt the warmth course through me.
“Thanks, I was freezing,” I said.
“Quick, take another.”
I took a quick drink then tossed the bottle back to him.
“You’re no stranger to this stuff,” he said as he crawled closer. “And you know how to handle a rifle.”
“I used to go hunting with my father and brothers when I was younger. Better days.”
“Are you a good shot?” asked Surkov.
I shrugged. “I never had the heart to kill any animals. But I did all right at target practice.”
“Looks like you’ll get your chance quite soon.”
The medics in the group ahead of us scrambled from the firing range. Officers barked orders at the group as they ran from the field. An officer kicked snow at us as he shouted the order to fill in the vacated firing positions. Sprawled in the wet snow, my group fired ice-cold rifles at targets, bales of hay with a paper drawing of a body draped down one side. The officers cursed and kicked the poorest of the shooters. The deafening sound of the gunfire numbed my senses and quickened my breathing as two of the officers moved in my direction. I reloaded my rifle with trembling hands.
Over the thunder of the rifles, Surkov managed to warn me: “One of the men in my barracks told me he heard about a medic that shot so well, they sent him to the infantry.”
I stared at Surkov in disbelief. The officers trudged toward us. God in heaven, what was I doing here?
Surkov moved away just before a voice barked: “Our glorious soldiers have pushed the invaders away from Moscow and freed Leningrad. Comrades, we must support our brave troops and save Mother Russia.” The sergeant, his face red from shouting and stiff with cold, turned to me. “You there, fire now.”
I gulped then took aim at the target, but moved my rifle to the left as I fired, missing the entire target. I fired again, only nicking the edge of the left shoulder. The officer stomped up beside me.
“You incompetent excuse for a soldier! Can’t you hit anything?” He kicked me hard in the leg. “Pathetic. I expected it.”
Swallowing my retort and gritting my teeth, I watched Surkov’s lousy shooting and subsequent abuse. Once the officers moved out of vision of my target, I gained Surkov’s attention, aimed my gun, and hit the target square in the forehead. Surkov smiled. The fight in me had returned.
“Maggot,” I muttered, rubbing my leg.
As I waited for my next order, I spotted a communist officer, standing out of the wind yet shivering in his re-trimmed hat and coat. I hated those bombastic pigs, especially that major that sent me here. My friend Nastia, who was scared of Party members and men in general, said whenever she saw a uniformed communist, she imagined them naked for a good laugh. I tried it, but it just made me nauseated. Fat heads, fat bellies—they all stunk of imported cigarettes and high-class vodka they received as perks.
***
In the twilight, I trudged back toward the barracks. With only a few iced-over poplars lining the black mud road to the east, land stretched before me in every direction and it frightened me. I stared at the gray sky that hesitated; I stopped and waited a few moments then the snow fell, eager to cover me and the ground around me. For a moment, I imagined a line of approaching Germans, monsters in green uniforms, ready to fire. Shaking off my fears of the impossible, for the camp was far from any battles, I looked out over the steppe and I saw nothing—no familiar faces, no fire-lit homes, no web of streets, no place to hide—just an endless expanse of white. Even the rare morning of winter sun had given me no comfort in my new life, my new world. Why they hadn’t just left me alone? First, the iron fist took me from my hard-earned work; then they sent me to learn how to bandage injuries and clean up vomit; after that, the faceless bureaucrats assigned me to a hospital to watch people die; now I was learning how to survive near battle. Then it struck me—they were preparing me to kill. My heart thudded against my ribs.
I wanted to go home.
Still, I hated the German monsters even more than I hated the Bolshevik bastards. At least communists were human. At the hospital, I had seen the damage of the Nazi bullets as they tore through flesh and bones, the fires that scorched faces and skin, and the explosions that ripped legs from bodies. Nazism hammered the earth from a poisonous black mist, bludgeoning and shrouding all good as it covered the continent in evil.
I felt on edge the rest of that evening. Enervated, I climbed into my rickety bed with the sound of rifle fire reverberating in my head. I guess I didn’t twirl my hair that night—I awoke the next morning with it clutched in my fists and my knees pulled up to my chest. Breathe. Think. No, don’t cry, breathe and breathe again.
***
After two weeks of marching, target practice, gun-care instruction, and latrine cleaning, I was back on a train. Sitting on a pile of straw on a filthy wood floor, I scanned the faces of the dozen men and three women in my car—several were hardened soldiers, dirty and smelly, others were medics like me, raw and fearful, cringing at the sound of explosions in the distance. I tugged my brown gloves over my pale hands. They were slightly broad yet strong and differed greatly from my mother’s long, bony hands, rough and red from work and hot water, quick and busy when nervous. Though thirty-two years old, I had been forced out of my dinky apartment after Danilov died at Stalingrad and back into my childhood bedroom. Now, on a frigid January day in 1944, I didn’t even have that—I had a train hurling me toward the contents of my nightmares—faceless German monsters in green uniforms with booming, black rifles and long, bloody knives. 
As the train reached full speed, a soldier sitting on the floor gained my attention. I studied his whiskered, weather-hardened face, yet could not read his expression. I wondered if he thought of home or the next battle. Perhaps he was so inured to fighting that he no longer knew fear; maybe he had resigned himself to death. As I silently queried him, the soldier glanced up at me. I dropped my eyes, but not before I saw exhaustion and despair, and something else—a longing, or a regret, perhaps. When Vlady returned home injured, he chose his words carefully and minded his manner. I considered my brother brave. I began to wonder if he felt the desperation and resignation I saw in this soldier’s face.
I ventured another glance at the soldier. He still looked at me, though his expression had changed. He knew he had been observed and now guarded his demeanor. I averted my eyes, choosing instead the view of the gray sky through the window. What did my face reveal? Fear, certainly, but nothing of my disaffected life. 
***
Finally, we were jarred to a stop. I jumped from the train with the others as no steps were provided. My numb and cramped legs, weakened by the long ride, could not prevent me from falling into the slushy snow as I landed. Embarrassed, I jumped to my feet. 
“You’re a better shot,” said Surkov, who approached from another car. 
I smiled, pleased to see a familiar stranger. I observed the man standing with Surkov.
“Elena Nevskaya, meet Semarenko.” Surkov turned to the tall medic beside him. “What’s your first name?”
“Yevgeny,” answered the sharp-featured, light-haired man. He picked up my duffle bag from the snow and slung it over his shoulder.
“Thank you, but I should carry it.” I took the bag from Semarenko. “You see, if I don’t act like I can take care of myself then I’ll be washing bedpans all day. You understand, don’t you? It was very nice of you.”
Semarenko nodded. The three of us turned to the shouts of an officer several yards away. We moved with the other medics past the train station then climbed into several waiting trucks. Surkov pushed away a medic to allow Semarenko to get on the truck with us. We settled on the floor of the filthy truck. The canvas roof and sides did little to diminish the cold. The ride was bumpy through the snow and mud on the pock-marked roads. The day’s light began to wane.
“Nevskaya, Semarenko, I have a confession.” Surkov squelched a grin.
“By all means, tell us,” I said.
“Last night I broke into the officers’ mess and stole three bottles of vodka.”
Semarenko and I burst out laughing. Surkov maintained his seriousness.
“Tonight, we will drink together,” said Surkov.
Semarenko said with a smirk, “We drink together, we can be heroes together, and maybe we die together.”
Surkov chortled then slapped him on the back. An explosion accentuated the tall man’s final remark and deadened Surkov’s levity. I pulled my bag close at the sound of the nearby shelling. The two men appeared equally frightened, heartening me and validating my fears.
“But tonight, we drink,” I said with a smile. 
Surkov tapped his duffle. “We need to keep this safe.”
However, our spirits quickly deflated as a new round of explosions erupted, shaking the ground around us and surely the entire planet. The ride continued and the road worsened as the truck bounced and jerked, sloshing my meager breakfast around in my stomach. I concluded the driver was insane as he maintained an inappropriate speed for the conditions, though we seemed to be moving away from the shelling. Eventually, the truck slid to a grinding halt. The doors squeaked open. As I was directed to my barracks by a soldier, Surkov pointed to the west side of the hospital. I nodded and moved away to my building as I looked back at the hospital, a two-story rectangular box covered in cracked gray siding. The sound of shrieking brakes heralded the arrival of three mud-splattered ambulances, which halted at the east wing of the building. Medics burst out of the building and out of the trucks. Soon, stretchers streamed into the building. I felt a pang of guilt about my selfish plan to relax and drink the first evening. 
***
The women’s barracks were musty, cramped and dim, with unpainted plywood walls. I was heartened when I discovered the bunk beds. I had secretly feared we would sleep on the floor, subject to any sort of vermin seeking refuge from the harsh Russian winter. The door also had a lock, to keep out another sort of vermin. I resolved to keep my head in the midst of my new male friends. 
I shuffled down the aisle till I spotted an open bed. I exchanged pleasantries with a tall blonde nurse from Tula, named Olga, who occupied a lower bunk. I tossed my bag on the upper bunk, which gave a metallic squeak. The room housed ten sets of bunk beds, all squished together in the dingy room. Frost formed on the inside of the windows. For the first time, I felt thankful for my woolen pants, thick boots, and heavy coat, drab as they were.
“Do you think I could still get something to eat?” I asked. 
“Sure, wait and I’ll go with you. You can get food at almost any time since we run shifts all day and all night. I just need to change.”
“What time did you start?”
“Five. I’m exhausted.”
“Do you like vodka?”
“Sure, but where could we get that? Sometimes I have enough money to buy it, but I’m always too tired to socialize or do anything.” Olga buttoned up a clean, shit-colored shirt.
“You stay with me. I know a couple of medics who aren’t quite ready to let go of living, at least till tomorrow.”
“Fine. Just remember, five o’clock comes around pretty quick.”
An hour later, Olga, Surkov, Semarenko, and I met at the newly dubbed “Vodka Room,” an old storage room with an exterior entrance on the west wing. The back half of the room contained junked truck parts and a few broken crates. Seepage of water from the cracked cinder block walls in the rear corner gave the room a dankness which forced us to open the door periodically to let in fresh, frigid air. Though the conditions proved uncomfortable, I enjoyed the feeling of defiance as I drank vodka stolen from communist officers.
Forced to sit on the cold, concrete floor, we exchanged small talk. Surkov described how the building, once a textile factory, had closed once the Germans neared the area. The abandoned factory was converted into a hospital when the Russian front lines secured the area. Two exterior buildings underwent cursory renovations to become barracks for the medical staff and soldiers guarding the area. The upper floor of the hospital wasn’t used because most of the stairwells were in disrepair. Our weary group talked briefly regarding the tasks ahead. The men knew that in time they would experience the danger of medics on the front lines. Olga felt confident she would continue as a surgeon’s nurse, and I said I hoped to stay with the accustomed duties of an orderly. This ugly gray box was my new cage—though it was better than going to the front.
Even though Surkov and Olga were willing to talk of themselves, like Semarenko, I spoke little of myself, strangely pleased that no one knew anything about my seditious secrets. What would they think if they knew how much of my life had been spent fighting the relentless Soviet chokehold that gripped every one of their lives? Surkov would probably pour me a large portion and toast me, but what did I know about him? Or any of my new acquaintances? Any of them could be Party members sent to sniff out dissenters. I hadn’t stayed out of prison by being forthright. No, I would keep my silence and let them believe I was simply a misplaced professor in the bizarre clutch of war.
[Want more? Click below to read a longer excerpt.]


Praise for the Book
"A stirring historical novel that plumbs the depths of war for the possibilities of love ... Written in a wise, often poetical prose ... An epic portrayal of a romance born out of the rubble of World War II." ~ Kirkus Reviews
"Visually, Death Steppe would be a great film to watch. The historical setting is vibrantly described and Judy Bruce’s well-developed characters are the best I’ve read so far. They are well-fleshed out and their emotions vividly resonate from start to finish ... Bruce nailed the pace and plot of the story. The page-turning quality had me simply wanting to read on ... " ~ Readers’ Favorite Book Reviews
"Bruce beautifully captures the brutal landscape of war while weaving in the effects upon humanity and individuals. It was sometimes dark, sometimes beautiful, and at times incredibly suspenseful." ~ Caffeinated Book Reviewer
"I am happy to give Death Steppe: A World War II Novel 4 out of 4 stars. It deserves no less. It is a touching, raw story that will pull you in from the very start and keep you reading until the last page. Suspense, good writing and storytelling, unforgettable imagery, and rich, complex characters combine to make this one of the better books I’ve read in a long time. This multi-faceted story could be enjoyed by readers who like historical fiction, romance, and action stories. My congratulations to Judy Bruce for pouring her obvious talents and insights into this book and creating a stirring, poignant, thought-provoking story." ~ Online Book Club

My Review


By Lynda Dickson
Elena Nevskaya is a Muscovite, widow, literature professor, black marketeer, and secret Christian, who is "volunteered" as a medic by the Russian army in their battle against Nazi Germany in 1944. Elena is surrounded by death and, with all of her loved ones dying around her, she concludes that "love meant pain". She is forced to stare death in the face every day as she tends to wounded soldiers - first in the hospital and later on the front line. Later still, she is conscripted as a navigator with the female bomber pilots dubbed the "Night Witches", where she learns that now she must "kill - it is the only way to survive". When disaster strikes, Elena comes face-to-face with the enemy, in the form of Lieutenant Friedrich Halder, a Russian-speaking German officer who is battling demons of his own. Will they be able to put aside their differences in order to survive?
The story is told in the first person by Elena and in the third person by Halder. This technique allows their stories to intertwine more and more as time progresses, without losing track of who is narrating. The book is full of interesting characters, but too many are introduced by name, making it unclear which ones we need to remember for later. Although based on true events of World War II, I doubt one woman would have gone through everything that Elena experiences - but it sure does make for an interesting story. As Elena is exposed to the horrors of war, so too are we. The writing is as stark as the landscape, with brutal descriptions of the savagery of war, the atrocities of the death camps, the suffering endured by captured enemies, and the brutality of the soldiers. While the narrative recounts what people will do in the name of war and in the name of love, it is - thankfully - interwoven with a thread of faith and hope. The fitting and realistic ending will leave you with a lump in your throat.
Warnings: graphic violence, coarse language, mild sex scenes.

Guest Post by the Author (originally featured on the author's blog)
The Story Behind Death Steppe
No, steppe doesn’t refer to a Victorian-era horror story; it’s a World War II tale about war on the western Russia prairie, an area akin to the grasslands of the Great Plains in America and Canada, or the veldt in southern or eastern Africa.
Anyway, my World War II novel takes place in 1944, during Germany’s retreat from western Soviet Union. My story follows the lives of a Russian war widow, Elena, a dissident, Christian, and black marketeer, as she serves as a medic on the front lines, and a disillusioned German lieutenant, Halder, a former professor and concentration camp officer, as he fights in a losing effort. In time, Elena and others, are forced into service as temporary navigators in an all-female regiment to the Red Army air force. After Elena’s plane crashes, she finds the injured Halder from the squadron she helped bomb. As enemies, the injured Elena and Halder alternate between helping and nearly killing each other. Eventually, the desperate soldiers discover an unexpected bond. Together they embark on a turbulent journey as lovers and disheartened deserters.
I present an unusual perspective – the reluctant female soldier. She plays several roles as she saves, kills, loves, hates, and flees. I was fascinated by my research on the "Night Witches", Soviet women who flew canvas and plywood training planes (without parachutes) on night scouting and bombing missions. I take Halder through the moral torture of an officer-in-training at Dachau, before he fails as a Nazi and is sent to the horror of the front lines, presumably to die. Both struggle with the notion of a loving God in a time of monstrous cruelty and loss.
At its core, it’s a story about two people forced from their jobs and their families by governments they hate and fear into the sacrifices, the traumas, and the moral battles they face amid a war that kills 30 million people in western U.S.S.R. Within the war story is a tale of two unlikely lovers forced to create their own rules, their own solutions, their own versions of love, redemption, and escape.
Sounds like a real knee-slapper, doesn’t it? Well, I’ve never claimed to be a comedian, though my daughter and son think I’m goofy.
I liked the idea of putting ordinary people in extraordinary circumstances. Though my two main characters are professors, brains won’t stop a bullet or a bomb. And it’s bravery more than any trait that helps them to survive.
An important theme in the story refers to the struggle with reconciling war with one’s religious beliefs. I found it natural for Elena and Halder to question, plead, and pray to God as they walked the tightrope between life and death. So often, any misstep meant falling in to the chasm of death. Although they came from different backgrounds - Elena from clandestine Christianity, Halder from established Protestantism, they faced the similar perils and moments of faith and doubt.
As they witnessed and fought through the horrors of war they asked: where is God? And they wondered how can you be a Christian in war? The old saying states there are no atheists in foxholes. I think my characters face the same questions that would torment people of any faith or moral code. Pacifism is a belief for people to ascribe to in the safety of their homes - it doesn’t apply to those forced to fend for their lives. This story boils down to the search for humanity in the midst of brutality.

About the Author
I am a resident of Omaha, Nebraska, where I live with my husband and two children. I have a law degree from Creighton University, and I’ve visited the area in which the story takes place. I’m the author of the Wind Series (Voices in the Wind, Alone in the Wind, and Cries in the Wind - coming soon) and Death Steppe.


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