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Lots of action and intrigue combined with a heart-throbbing love story... this is an adventure story of a young man in the American Revolution who finds himself trapped behind enemy lines... and the only thing he can do for his country is to become a spy! Not only that, but Penelope, the girl he falls in love with, has a relationship with a pompous British officer. Daniel fights for freedom and is willing to give his life for the cause. But wounded in battle and left for dead, he awakens... only to find he is in a spy's house!When Daniel discovers he is in a Tory minister's home in Philadelphia, he realizes he is in a lot of trouble. Behind enemy lines and out of uniform, he agrees to do the one thing that is most abhorrent to him.His opponent is a talented and popular officer with lofty ambitions. He aims to catch the spies who send information out of New York to General Washington. His lust for power may well cause the Americans to lose the war and Daniel and his companions to lose their lives. Penelope, caught between two worlds and two men, must choose between them. Based on actual historical facts. Please leave a review.
In 1773, seventeen-year-old apothecary Oliver Carter moves to Boston and begins helping the Sons of Liberty in their rebellion against British tyranny in the colonies as well as discovering that his boss, Dr. Benjamin Church, is a traitor to the cause.
In this striking study of the pre–Civil War literary imagination, Karen Sánchez-Eppler charts how bodily difference came to be recognized as a central problem for both political and literary expression. Her readings of sentimental anti-slavery fiction, slave narratives, and the lyric poetry of Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson demonstrate how these texts participated in producing a new model of personhood—one in which the racially distinct and physically constrained slave body converged alongside the sexually distinct and domestically circumscribed female body. Moving from the public domain of abolitionist politics to the privacy of lyric poetry, Sánchez-Eppler argues that attention to the physical body blurs the boundaries between public and private. Drawing analogies between black and female bodies, feminist-abolitionists use the public sphere of anti-slavery politics to write about sexual desires and anxieties they cannot voice directly. However, Sánchez-Eppler warns against exaggerating the positive links between literature and politics. She finds that the relationships between feminism and abolitionism reveal patterns of exploitation, appropriation, and displacement of the black body that acknowledge the difficulties in embracing “difference” in the nineteenth century as in the twentieth. Her insightful examination of these issues makes a distinctive mark within American literary and cultural studies. This title is part of UC Press’s Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press’s mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1993.