Mystic Chords of Memory
The Lost Journal of William Wallace Lincoln
by
Book Details
About the Book
My father died in 1990 and in the process of going through his belongings I discovered an old wooden weather-beaten trunk in the attic that aroused my curiosity. Considering the layers of dust covering the lid, it appeared that it had not been opened in many years. The lid seemed to creak and strain with the weight of the ages as I lifted the heavy oak. A neatly-folded Union Civil War uniform, complete with cap, stared up at me from the lost past. Although obviously worn, great care had been taken in its preservation. I gingerly lifted up the jacket and immediately noticed the three sergeant stripes on the upper arm. I knew then who had worn it.
My great-grandfather, Sergeant Charles Powers, had served two tours of duty during the Civil War and in 1861-62 had been stationed in Washington with the thousands of other troops guarding the city from what many thought was an imminent invasion from the South. During that period of 1861-62 he was at various times assigned to guarding the White House, Capitol and Arsenal.
Sgt. Powers lived till 1918 and my father, born in 1908, used to travel with his parents from
About the Author
Donald Motier was born in 1943. He graduated from college in 1970 with a B.A. in Philosophy and minor in English. He is the author of eleven other books including four novels, a novella/short story collection, five collections of poetry, and a work of biography/literary criticism. He resides in
The author, who describes himself as primarily a novelist, poet and incurable romantic, states that Mystic Chords of Memory: The Lost Journal of William Wallace Lincoln is a work of “creative,” “factional” predominantly historical nonfiction, with a few fantasy/sci-fi elements that are close to the author’s heart. The book is based on the Civil War service of his great-grandfather, a sergeant in the Pennsylvania Volunteers, and the life of Willie Lincoln, perfect clone of his father, who died tragically of multiple diseases on February 20, 1862 at age eleven.
All historical writing, be it primary source or contemporary, is colored through the lens of the author.
–Anonymous