
Book Description:
Soldiers Saving Soldiers is the story of the 18th Surgical Hospital and the hundreds of doctors, nurses, medics and support personnel who were stationed at Pleiku, South Vietnam during the Vietnam War. Part combat hospital and part medical clinic for Vietnamese and Montagnard villagers, the 18th Surgical Hospital served as a vital lifeline and saved the lives of thousands of American servicemen, enemy combatants and local families throughout the Vietnam War. Like their fellow countrymen who fought the war, the men and women of the 18th Surgical Hospital have been forever changed by their experiences in Vietnam, both good and bad. The book also presents the entire history of the unit, from its origins in 1928 through World War II, and then from reactivation in Vietnam through 1971. In addition, Dr. Martin presents the day-to-day life of a field surgeon with a look at dozens of surgical procedures and their outcomes (with detailed full-color case photographs, plus nearly 500 photographs of people and places throughout Vietnam.
Author Biography:
Jerry W. Martin, M.D., was born in Providence (Webster County), Kentucky, on November 28, 1935 to Charles R. Martin, Jr. and Rosena Playl Martin. He graduated from Providence High School in 1954 and continued his education at Vanderbilt University in 1954-55 (Sigma Nu), B.S. from Western Kentucky State College, 1958 and M.D. at University of Louisville College of Medicine in 1963 (Alpha Kappa Kappa).
He married Jimmie D. Hobgood on December 18, 1955. They have two daughters, Melissa Martin Johnson, R.N., Mary Elizabeth Martin, B.S., D.V.M. and a son, Charles Stanley Martin, B.S., B.A., M.A., J.D., one grandchild, Elizabeth Johnson Hathaway, B.A., and one great grandchild, Sarah Elizabeth Hathaway.

Book Description:
BREAK THE SKIN: Laney--a skinny, awkward teenager alone in the world--thinks she's found a kindred spirit in thirty-five-year-old Delilah. Then the police come to ask Laney questions and she finds herself reconstructing a story of suspense, deceit, and revenge--a story that will haunt her forever. Seven hundred miles away in Texas, Miss Baby is desperate for true love. When she meets a stranger, a man who claims he can't remember his real name or his past but who seems gentle and trusting, Miss Baby thinks she may have finally found someone to love. But Miss Baby and Laney are connected by a terrible crime, and, bit by bit, the complex web of deceptions and seemingly small misjudgments they're each helped to created start to unravel. Action, speculation, and contradiction play off one another as the story is told through their first-person voices, which keep you nervously guessing all the way to the shocking climax.
Author Biography:
Lee Martin is the author of the novels, The Bright Forever, a finalist for the 2006 Pulitzer Prize in Fiction; River of Heaven; Quakertown; and Break the Skin. He has also published two memoirs, From Our House and Turning Bones, and another memoir, Such a Life, is set to appear in 2012. His first book was the short story collection, The Least You Need To Know. He is the winner of the Mary McCarthy Prize in Short Fiction and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Ohio Arts Council. He teaches in the MFA Program at The Ohio State University, where he was the winner of the 2006 Alumni Award for Distinguished Teaching.

Book Description:
An airline pilot returns to the site of his 1944 B-17 crash in Europe and finds himself drawn back in time, retracing the trail of his escape through Occupied France and trying to find again the girl guide who led him to safe shelter -- the girl in the blue beret. "Bobbie Ann Mason just keeps outdistancing herself. The Girl in the Blue Beret has everything: adventure, intrigue, fear, sorrow, nostalgic ache, regret, romance, and most importantly, love. She writes of the platonic love of one's fellow travelers, along with romantic love -- and what a beautiful love story it is, told with grace and elegance from the point of view of a narrator you won't soon forget. I loved this book, and so will you." Richard Bausch, author of Something is Out There and Peace "Once again, Mason has plumbed the moral dimensions of national conflict in the lives of individual participants and produced a deeply moving, relevant novel." Ron Charles, The Washington Post "Mason based this haunting novel on her late father-in-law's wartime experiences, and the rich setting, detail, and intimate character nuances ring true. Highly recommended." Library JournalAuthor Biography:
Bobbie Ann Mason was raised on her family's dairy farm in western Kentucky. Her first short stories were published in The New Yorker, and these were included in her first book of fiction, Shiloh & Other Stories. The collection won the PEN/Hemingway Award and was nominated for the American Book Award, the PEN/Faulkner Award, and the National Book Critics Circle Award. Her first novel, In Country, is taught widely in classes and was made into a film starring Bruce Willis and Emily Lloyd. Both Feather Crowns and Zigzagging Down a Wild Trail won the Southern Book Critics Circle Award. Her memoir, or family history, Clear Springs, was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. She belongs to the Authors Guild, PEN, and the Fellowship of Southern Writers.
Book Description:
HOW TO SURVIVE GRADUATE SCHOOL & OTHER DISASTERS is a collection of short stories about everyone from graduate students to Girl Scouts, from teenagers to retirees. These stories are set in Cincinnati, New Jersey, Indiana, Baltimore, East Berlin, and Washington, D.C., but all of them have one thing in common: they are stories about surviving the disasters and dysfunctional relationships we all have with friends, family, and lovers. "How happy I am to make the acquaintance of the characters in Molly McCaffrey’s stories—the girls and women who face the world with gusto, sometimes make unwise decisions, and sometimes find themselves put upon by circumstances beyond their control. The stories in How to Survive Graduate School & Other Disasters are gritty and tender. They are brave stories, written with grace and precision. —Lee Martin, Pulitzer Prize finalist and author of THE BRIGHT FOREVERAuthor Biography:
Molly McCaffrey is the author of the short story collection How to Survive Graduate School & Other Disasters, the co-editor of Commutability: Stories about the Journey from Here to There, and the founder of I Will Not Diet, a blog devoted to healthy living and body acceptance. She teaches English and creative writing classes at Western Kentucky University in Bowling Green, Kentucky.
Book Description:
Author Biography:
Brian D. McKnight is Associate Professor of History at the University of Virginia’s College at Wise where he teaches American military history and courses in the Civil War era. His first book, Contested Borderland: The Civil War in Appalachian Kentucky and Virginia (Kentucky, 2006), won the James I. Robertson Literary Prize in Confederate History and his most recent book, Confederate Outlaw: Champ Ferguson and the Civil War in Appalachia, was released in April 2011. In addition to these works, he also worked on the Ashley Judd episode of NBC’s Who Do You Think You Are?.

Book Description:
The Axman Came from Hell covers a number of historical true murder stories from several Southern states. Cases include the terrifying, unidentified New Orleans Axman; one of America's first serial killers, who preyed on servant girls in 1885 Austin; an actress who shot her leading man in Chattanooga; the hatchet murder of a Louisiana professor in 1925; three Kentucky stories; and cases from Georgia, Mississippi, Alabama, Virginia, West Virginia, Texas, and Florida. It is especially recommended for readers interested in true crime or history.
Author Biography:
Keven McQueen is an instructor in the Department of English and Theater at Eastern Kentucky University. He is the author of several books on biography, history, folklore, ghost lore, and true crime, including the "Offbeat Kentuckians" series, Murder in Old Kentucky, Cruelly Murdered, The Kentucky Book of the Dead, Forgotten Tales of Kentucky, and The Great Louisville Tornado of 1890.

Book Description:
Author Biography:
New York Times bestseller Teresa Medeiros wrote her first novel at the age of twenty-one, introducing readers to one of the most beloved and versatile voices in women's fiction. She has appeared on every national bestseller list, including the New York Times, USA Today and Publishers Weekly lists. She currently has over ten million books in print and is published in over seventeen languages. She lives in western Kentucky with her husband and her cats Willow and Buffy the Mouse Slayer. You can visit her website at http://www.teresamedeiros.com.

Book Description:
Author Biography:
Trish Milburn is a freelance journalist, lives in the South, and is a big fan of the outdoors and U.S. National Parks. When not writing, she enjoys hiking, nature photography, reading, traveling, watching TV or movies, and surfing the Web. She's also a big sci-fi geek and has been known to cosplay while attending Dragon*Con each year.

Book Description:
This is a 55 page book of original poems, a few of which have been published elsewhere. George Eklund, Poet and Professor at Morehead State University says, "For Mary Ellen Miller, the poet is a gatherer of imperfections that are transformed into jewels -- poems with dangerous interiors brewing within evil forms of elegant, heart-breaking restraint."
Author Biography:
Mary Ellen Miller is a professor of English at Western Kentucky University where she teaches American Literature, Creative Writing, and general education courses.

Book Description:
Author Biography:
The author, Dr. William Lynwood Montell, graduated from Western Kentucky University in 1960, then received M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Indiana University in 1963, 1964. He taught at Campbellsville College (now University) from 1963 to 1969, at Western Kentucky University from 1969-1999, and a a Visiting Professor at UCLA and Notre Dame.
Dr. Montell has written 27 books and is presently working on two more. He has conducted numerous oral history and folklife workshops and seminars across the United States and in England, Scotland, and Canada.

Book Description:
Author Biography:
ROBERT MORGAN is the author of poetry, fiction, and nonfiction, noted most for his novel Gap Creek and Boone, his biography of Daniel Boone, both of which were national bestsellers. A professor of Cornell University since 1971 and visiting writer-in-residence at half a dozen universities, his awards include Guggenheim and Rockefeller fellowships and an Academy of Arts and Letters Award for Literature. He was inducted into the North Carolina Literary Hall of Fame in 2010.
Book Description:
In an exciting journey through the back alleys and graveyards of Philadelphia in the 1880s, to the halls of the nation's first hospital and the frontiers of medical research, Anna Myers will capture middle readers with the darker days of history.
Author Biography:
Anna Myers is the author of nineteen novels for young people, all published by Walker Books. She has won many state and national awards including awards from The New York Public Library, Banks Street College, and Parent Choice Awards. For more information see annamyers.info.

Book Description:
Great Civil War Stories in Kentucky treats the lesser known sides of the Civil War: its people, the battles, the military operations, with attention to the unfamiliar sides to the more famous, like Lincoln and his relationship within the commonwealth. Marshall Myers looks for the unusual, but significant points, and presents them in layperson's language.
Author Biography:
At the age of seven, Marshall Myers moved to rural Kentucky. There he attended a one-room school, later graduating from Meade County High School. He earned degrees at Lindsey Wilson, Kentucky Wesleyan, Eastern Kentucky University, and a Ph.D. in Rhetoric and Composition at the University of Louisville. He has been writing since 1978 in a variety of genres. Dr. Marshall currently writes a column for Back Home in Kentucky magazine. He has two daughters, five grandsons, and one great-grandson. He's married to Dr. Lynn Gillaspie and he lives in Richmond, Kentucky.


















