Rifles for Watie

Front Cover
HarperCollins, May 19, 2015 - Young Adult Fiction - 352 pages

Winner of the Newbery Medal * An ALA Notable Children’s Book * Winner of the Lewis Carroll Shelf Award

A captivating and richly detailed novel about one young soldier who saw the Civil War from both sides and lived to tell the tale.

Earnest, plain-spoken sixteen-year-old Jeff Bussey has finally gotten his father’s consent to join the Union volunteers. It’s 1861 in Linn County, Kansas, and Jeff is eager to fight for the North before the war is over, which he’s sure will be soon.

But weeks turn to months, the marches through fields and woods prove endless, hunger and exhaustion seem to take up permanent residence in Jeff’s bones, and he learns what it really means to fight in battle—and to lose friends. When he finds himself among enemy troops, he’ll have to put his life on the line to advance the Union cause.

Thoroughly researched and based on firsthand accounts, Rifles for Watie “should hold a place with the best Civil War fiction for young people” (The Horn Book).

A strong choice for independent reading and for sharing in a classroom and for homeschooling. As a homeschool cooperative teacher commented: "The book has launched many discussions in our class. When a person is on one side of a conflict, it is important to remember that people on the other side are also people. Jeff is a perfect model for how treating people with respect can happen even in war." 

 

Contents

Linn County Kansas 1861
1
Bushwhackers
9
Fort Leavenworth
15
Captain Asa Clardy
23
Furlough
33
March
38
Battle of Wilsons Creek
53
Hard Lessons
67
The Cow Lot
159
Fate of the Brandts
175
The Name on the Watch
186
The Ride of Noah Babbitt
203
Wrong Side of the River
230
The Jackmans
253
Boggy Depot
269
Pheasant Bluff
283

Light Bread and Apple Butter
77
Foraging in the Cherokee Country
91
Lucy Washbourne
111
Battle of Prairie Grove
123
Expedition to Van Buren
140
The Redbud Tree
296
Flight
302
Linn County Kansas 1865
317
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About the author (2015)

Harold Keith grew up near the Cherokee country he describes in Rifles for Watie.A native Oklahoman, he was edu-cated at Northwestern State Teachers College at Alva and at the University of Oklahoma.

While traveling in eastern Oklahoma doing research on his master's thesis in history, Mr. Keith found a great deal of fresh material about the Civil War in the Indian country. Deciding he might someday write a historical novel, he interviewed twenty--two Civil War veterans then living in Oklahoma and Arkansas; much of the background of Rifles for Watiecame from the note-books he filled at that time. The actual writing of this book took five years.

Since 1930, the author has been sports publicity director at the University of Oklahoma. He is married and has a son and daughter.