Soldiers of Conquest

Fiction & Literature, Religious, Action Suspense, Historical
Cover of the book Soldiers of Conquest by F. M. Parker, F. M. Parker
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Author: F. M. Parker ISBN: 9781908400994
Publisher: F. M. Parker Publication: January 21, 2013
Imprint: F. M. Parker Language: English
Author: F. M. Parker
ISBN: 9781908400994
Publisher: F. M. Parker
Publication: January 21, 2013
Imprint: F. M. Parker
Language: English
With a long list of stirring novels, F. M. Parker has won acclaim as a spellbinder. Soldiers Of Conquest has received high praise from Booklist and Publisher's Weekly.

American-Mexican War 1846 -1848.
President Polk, desiring to expand the United States to the Pacific Ocean, orders General Zachary Taylor with his army to the Rio Grande on the Mexican border. Mexico controlled much of the western land, including California. Among the men is Lieutenant Ulysses S. Grant. Taylor invades Mexico and defeats the Mexican Army in three hard fought battles. When the Mexicans won't sign a treaty with the US, President Polk orders General Winfield Scott to invade Mexico at Veracruz and march inland and capture Mexico City.

General Scott arrives at Veracruz with 100 ships crowded with 9,000 soldiers and the holds crammed with cannons, muskets and cavalry mounts. Among the soldiers were Lieutenant Ulysses S. Grant and Captain Robert E. Lee.

Grant was 24 years old, a smallish fellow from Ohio. He was a hardened combat veteran from fighting with General Taylor in northern Mexico. Lee is 40 years old, stood six feet tall, and was from the famous Lee family of Virginia. He is untested in battle.
Though different in many respects, both men desired glory and increase in grade, and both knew that it is during war that those things could be won if a man acted bravely.

General Scott lands his army upon the hostile Mexican shore. After a heavy bombardment of Veracruz, the Americans capture the walled city. Scott waits for the reinforcements and supplies that President Polk had promised. When the men and supplies don't arrive and his men began to die from yellow fever, Scott severes his link with the States and his supply base at Veracruz and marches his small army into the mountains. He must capture Mexico City lying in the center of the nation of seven million inhabitants. He will lead his men to victory or death. General Santa Anna is waiting with an army of 30,000 soldiers to annihilate the small force of invading Americans.

From Soldiers Of Conquest:
Lee and Grant had ridden a short ways and were drawing near dense woods when six horsemen came out from hiding among the trees. At a word from the leader, a gaunt man with a hatchet sharp face and bulging black eyes, the riders divided with three on each side of the road. Holding their lariats coiled with the nooses open and positioned for quick throwing, they sat their horses and waited as the Americans came closer. Long endured hate showed in the men's black eyes. Now too there was a look of anticipation of inflicting punishment upon the Yankees.

'They want us to run and then they'll lasso and drag us,' Grant said as he and Lee stopped their mounts back some 100 feet from the Mexicans. He had seen the battered corpses of Americans that had been roped around the neck and dragged behind a running horse until dead.

'Well I don't feel like playing the hound and hare game with them. Or riding around them either.' Lee's voice betrayed no emotion.

'Neither do I,' Grant said and felt his urge to fight come afire.

'Captain Grant,' Lee said being very formal, 'I've heard that you're an excellent pistol shot, is that so?'

'Colonel Lee, I usually hit what I aim at.' Grant wasn't going to be out done in formality.

With a deliberate motion, Lee pointed a finger at the horseman who had given the order to the others, and was on Grant's side of the road. With a sharp, commanding voice, he said, 'Captain, kill that man if one of them moves to throw his lariat, or to pull a gun.'
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
With a long list of stirring novels, F. M. Parker has won acclaim as a spellbinder. Soldiers Of Conquest has received high praise from Booklist and Publisher's Weekly.

American-Mexican War 1846 -1848.
President Polk, desiring to expand the United States to the Pacific Ocean, orders General Zachary Taylor with his army to the Rio Grande on the Mexican border. Mexico controlled much of the western land, including California. Among the men is Lieutenant Ulysses S. Grant. Taylor invades Mexico and defeats the Mexican Army in three hard fought battles. When the Mexicans won't sign a treaty with the US, President Polk orders General Winfield Scott to invade Mexico at Veracruz and march inland and capture Mexico City.

General Scott arrives at Veracruz with 100 ships crowded with 9,000 soldiers and the holds crammed with cannons, muskets and cavalry mounts. Among the soldiers were Lieutenant Ulysses S. Grant and Captain Robert E. Lee.

Grant was 24 years old, a smallish fellow from Ohio. He was a hardened combat veteran from fighting with General Taylor in northern Mexico. Lee is 40 years old, stood six feet tall, and was from the famous Lee family of Virginia. He is untested in battle.
Though different in many respects, both men desired glory and increase in grade, and both knew that it is during war that those things could be won if a man acted bravely.

General Scott lands his army upon the hostile Mexican shore. After a heavy bombardment of Veracruz, the Americans capture the walled city. Scott waits for the reinforcements and supplies that President Polk had promised. When the men and supplies don't arrive and his men began to die from yellow fever, Scott severes his link with the States and his supply base at Veracruz and marches his small army into the mountains. He must capture Mexico City lying in the center of the nation of seven million inhabitants. He will lead his men to victory or death. General Santa Anna is waiting with an army of 30,000 soldiers to annihilate the small force of invading Americans.

From Soldiers Of Conquest:
Lee and Grant had ridden a short ways and were drawing near dense woods when six horsemen came out from hiding among the trees. At a word from the leader, a gaunt man with a hatchet sharp face and bulging black eyes, the riders divided with three on each side of the road. Holding their lariats coiled with the nooses open and positioned for quick throwing, they sat their horses and waited as the Americans came closer. Long endured hate showed in the men's black eyes. Now too there was a look of anticipation of inflicting punishment upon the Yankees.

'They want us to run and then they'll lasso and drag us,' Grant said as he and Lee stopped their mounts back some 100 feet from the Mexicans. He had seen the battered corpses of Americans that had been roped around the neck and dragged behind a running horse until dead.

'Well I don't feel like playing the hound and hare game with them. Or riding around them either.' Lee's voice betrayed no emotion.

'Neither do I,' Grant said and felt his urge to fight come afire.

'Captain Grant,' Lee said being very formal, 'I've heard that you're an excellent pistol shot, is that so?'

'Colonel Lee, I usually hit what I aim at.' Grant wasn't going to be out done in formality.

With a deliberate motion, Lee pointed a finger at the horseman who had given the order to the others, and was on Grant's side of the road. With a sharp, commanding voice, he said, 'Captain, kill that man if one of them moves to throw his lariat, or to pull a gun.'

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