Left by the Side of the Road: Characters without a Novel

ABOUT Carolyn Schriber

Carolyn Schriber
I am a retired college professor who specialized in medieval European history  After many years of writing academic monographs, I am now indulging my love of the Civil War by writing historical fiction. But along the way, I've also learned a great deal about today's publishing atmosphere. More...

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Description

"Left by the Side of the Road" is a collection of short stories about life in South Carolina's Low Country during the Civil War. It is not a continuous novel, or even a novella, although I have tried to maintain some chronological order among the stories. There is no single plot or story line. The collection is simply that--a series of glimpses into the past.

I'm publishing a second edition, which contains 13 more selections, and will be available in both trade paper and electronic formats.  Pre-orders for B&N, Apple iBooks, and Kobo should be open by mid-September.  Official release date is October 15.


The characters are real historical figures: slaves who were abandoned when the plantation owners fled in fear of the invading Union Army; government officials charged with the logistics of organizing captured territory; Army officers and the women who accompanied them; and abolitionists determined to prove that former slaves could become productive citizens.

Some of these people have appeared in my past books, "A Scratch with the Rebels" and "Beyond All Price." Others will make cameo appearances in my upcoming book, "The Road to Frogmore." All of them are here because they share certain characteristics.  They are fascinating people in their own right, but they do not play a major role in the story of Laura Towne and the founding of a school for former slaves at Frogmore. They are characters who were literally "left by the side of the road" as Laura's story developed.

All of these interesting people may some day become main characters in novels of their own. But for now, they serve two purposes. Through their observations and experiences they shed additional light on what life was really like during the Civil War. And more important, they form bridges between the stories I have already told and those that are yet to come.