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Lorena

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The worst was yet to come

The dreaded General Sherman had begun his fearful march to the sea. Lorena Selby was alone--a delicate, dark-eyed charmer whose fragile beauty belied her boundless courage and war-sharpened cunning. Her beloved Selby Hall lay directly in the path of the onrushing armies. Soon she would be facing the savage plunderers.

But the tall, smiling Pennsylvanian who arrived at Selby Hall was not the brutal invader she had expected. Lorena had been ready to defy an entire army--and now she found herself giving in to one lone Yankee soldier.

233 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1959

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About the author

Frank G. Slaughter

429 books80 followers
Frank Gill Slaughter , pen-name Frank G. Slaughter, pseudonym C.V. Terry, was an American novelist and physician whose books sold more than 60 million copies. His novels drew on his own experience as a doctor and his interest in history and the Bible. Through his novels, he often introduced readers to new findings in medical research and new medical technologies.

Slaughter was born in Washington, D.C., the son of Stephen Lucious Slaughter and Sarah "Sallie" Nicholson Gill. When he was about five years old, his family moved to a farm near Berea, North Carolina, which is west of Oxford, North Carolina. He earned a bachelor's degree from Trinity College (now Duke University) at 17 and went to medical school at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland. He began writing fiction in 1935 while a physician at Riverside Hospital in Jacksonville, Florida.

Books by Slaughter include The Purple Quest, Surgeon, U.S.A., Epidemic! , Tomorrow's Miracle and The Scarlet Cord. Slaughter died May 17, 2001 in Jacksonville, Florida.

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5 stars
7 (11%)
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18 (29%)
3 stars
27 (43%)
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6 (9%)
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4 (6%)
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Luckngrace.
486 reviews27 followers
July 4, 2011
For my favorite genre, Civil War HF, this one was just okay. It was mostly a romance, featuring characters who faired much too well in a time when NOBODY got by unscathed. Good entertainment, but not too useful if you're looking for realistic HF.
61 reviews
August 12, 2012
Civil war story of beautiful, intelligent, hard-working plantation owner with her jerk husband who is a leader in the Confederacy. Well written story of the changes in everyone's life near the end end of and following the Civil War. Could be classified as historical fiction. Surprise ending.
Profile Image for Jose Antonio.
367 reviews3 followers
March 18, 2025
Encontré esta novela por casualidad abandonada por su anterior dueño en la calle y yo, que no puedo evitar ser un poco un Diógenes de los libros, me la llevé. Meses después me animé a empezar a leerla, dándole una oportunidad de 40 o 50 páginas. No pude dejarla y la terminé, lo que habla bastante a su favor. Quizá no sea gran literatura, pero merece la pena y se lee muy bien. El libro que recogí de la calle pertenece a la famosa Colección Reno de Plaza & Janés y mi edición es de 1970.
Se trata de una novela histórica que cuenta el amor imposible entre una dama sureña malcasada y un militar norteño que ocupa sus tierras durante las postrimerías de guerra de Secesión norteamericana y la inmediata posguerra en una plantación de Georgia. Puede parecer un folletín, pero consigue mantener el interés durante sus 315 páginas. Uno de los puntos a favor de la novela es que no es una simple historia de amor imposible. Es interesante como retrata el Sur esclavista y cómo nos introduce en el nacimiento del Ku Klux Klan.
La recomiendo para los interesados en ese momento histórico. Se lee con fluidez e interés.
Profile Image for Erik.
Author 3 books9 followers
July 13, 2022
This 1959 historical novel turned out to be surprisingly good. The first half is about Lorena of the book's title, a plucky Georgia plantation wife who keeps her world together during Sherman's march by grit and a willingness to adapt. For example, she agrees to let Union troops billet on her property, in exchange for them not burning down her house, in contrast to neighboring landowners whose pride led them to lose everything.

The second half takes place about 3 years after the war and serves as a parable of Reconstruction. Lorena continues to thrive by working with Northern friends, poor Southern whites and freedmen, all while her neighbors continue to suffer in bitter delusion that the South will Rise Again. Meanwhile, as they sell off parts of their land to stay afloat, Lorena's stubborn white neighbors join the Klan and work to bring back slavery in all but name. The book ends with a satisfying battle between occupying troops and the Klan. Overall, the book compares well with other novels sympathetic to Reconstruction like those of Albion Tourgee.
Profile Image for Dee.
339 reviews
June 27, 2017
read this in high school....romanticized version of war, more about southern belle falls in love with yankee
35 reviews1 follower
April 17, 2008
This was another goodwill find. a no-brainer romance that is fairly unoffensive, set during the civil war. Lorena is the leading character who keeps her place together during the war. But of course falls for a yankee, shockingly enough she is married to a jerk of a husband, who is a southerner. Quick read
Profile Image for Lorena.
206 reviews5 followers
August 5, 2016
Quick easy romance read. Some details, for a modern reader, are hard to swallow; Feminism and Civil Rights still being in infancy at the time it was written- 1950's.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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