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Casca #26

Johnny Reb

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Johnny Reb is the #26th book in the popular The Eternal Mercenary Series which has sold over 2 million copies. In 26 stories Casca is plunged into histories' conflicts from the time of the Caesars to the post-colonial wars of the 1970s. Go on a journey through history and relieve the experiences of a soldier cursed to live forever. Come face to face with people who have been household names throughout time; Attila the Hun, Hernan Cortes, Adolf Hitler, Blackbeard the Pirate and Genghis Khan! Casca #26 Johnny Reb is the latest in the series. Casca fights in the American Civil War for the South. Read how he came to fight for the Confederacy and how he deals with trying to forge a fighting unit from the disparate untrained men who join up. Casca also has to combat the Brotherhood who add their weight against him as well as one of Casca's unit who is out to kill him. This novel also sees the return of Doctor Julius Goldman Also, see Halls of Montezuma #25 which takes place in the Mexican-American war. The main officers of the Civil war on both sides of the conflict were involved in this war

232 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2007

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About the author

Tony Roberts

39 books11 followers
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There is more than one author in the GoodReads database with this name

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5 stars
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35 (33%)
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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Daniel Carey.
226 reviews1 follower
June 25, 2021
In this second installment of the Casca American war trilogy by Tony Roberts (Books #25,26,27), Casca has remained on the Virginia McGuire Farm for many years after the Mexican War. As conflict and succession loom in the community of Lynchburg, Casca, hardly a proponent of slavery, joins the Confederacy because of his respect for the Southern belief in States rights over those rights of the Federal Government. He also respects many of his contemporaries such as James Longstreet and Robert E. Lee whom he fought with in their younger days in Mexico.

Casca becomes a father figure to Billy the young son of Ann McGuire and Sean Brady. Billy joins Casca in the Confederate Army and they fight together during some of the most massive and brutal campaigns on the eastern front of the War's first half. Casca also is aware that the Brotherhood of the lamb are still pursuing him and he continually worries for the lives of the McGuire Family.

I liked this installment more than Halls of Montezuma. Having such monumental figures from History grace the story such as George B. McClellan, Lee, Longstreet, Hill, Stonewall Jackson, Joe Johnston and others help add weight and character to the narrative. Casca doesn't have to stand alone this time among many paper thin characters in the plotline.

A worthy addition to Barry Sadler's vision for the Eternal Mercenary.
3 reviews
September 11, 2023
Great for a civil war story

I am not a civil war fan, being an Alaskan, but it was a good book. I had read about it in History class, but this book made it more real.
Profile Image for Nicholas.
289 reviews2 followers
January 4, 2017
26 books in this series, and this is so far *the* worst of them. This isn't a Casca story so much as it is a poorly constructed, dully recounted telling of bits of the Slaver's Insurrection (i.e., The Civil War) written from the point of view of a Confederate sympathizer with some history books.

When the author *does* bother to get back to the story part of this book, he does so in a way that makes you think he's got a Bad Writing Cliché checklist right there next to his keyboard. Villains who might as well be described as twirling their mustaches, a nagging spurned love interest who carries the idiot ball for several touchdowns (and gets brainwashed largely by having sex), and ubiquitous, nigh-omniscient bad guys who are getting *far* too much screen time with no personality or even clever dialogue.

If you've read the Casca books, you know the stories are not presented in chronological order, which is fine. It's also something this author has decided to dispense with since he's telling one long, incredibly dull story over at least three books. If I want to read a trilogy or ongoing story, I'd go read the Lord of the Rings or the Wheel of Time or some such. I read the Casca novels for pulpy man-fiction with decent action scenes and familiar beats, not some pixel-picking recounting of some guy's stupid tactical recreation wargame exploits.

But that's exactly what this (and the first part in the previous novel) reads like. Frankly, I'm not looking forward to the next one. And if the poor handling of the franchise continues after that one, I may have to abandon the series.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews