War begins with courage. It ends with questions no soldier can escape.
In 1861, twenty year old Anderson Flowers leaves his Mississippi farm believing the war will be short and honorable. Alongside his closest friend Dallas, he voluntarily enlists to defend the South and prove himself a man.
But the war that unfolds is nothing like he had imagined.
Through brutal battles, prison camps, disease, and relentless marches across the South, Andy witnesses the true cost of war. Friends fall beside him. Letters from home become lifelines. And in the quiet moments between battles, a troubling voice echoes in his soul: Thou shalt not kill.
As the Confederacy crumbles and the fighting grows more desperate, Andy must confront a painful truth. The greatest battle is not against the enemy in blue, but within his own conscience.
Based on family records and years of historical research, Whisperwood brings the Civil War to life through the eyes of an ordinary soldier, the author's great-grandfather. Readers walk the muddy roads, feel the hunger and exhaustion, and experience the chaos of battle from the ground level of history.
But when the war finally ends, the question remains:
How does a man return home after learning what war has made of him?