Byliner Publishes THREE DAYS IN GETTYSBURG: An Intimate Tale of Lost Love and Divided Hearts at the Battle That Defined America by Brian Mockenhaupt

SAN FRANCISCO, CA--(Marketwired - June 12, 2013) - Marking this summer's 150th anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg, Byliner today publishes Three Days in Gettysburg ($1.99), an unforgettable new story by Brian Mockenhaupt, Iraq War veteran and acclaimed author of the Byliner Original The Living and the Dead.

For three days in early July of 1863, Union and Confederate troops had been brutally killing each other in the streets, fields, and forests of a small Pennsylvania town called Gettysburg. As the battle raged around her, a woman baked bread for Union soldiers, unaware of how she would soon become part of history. In a faraway hospital, the soldier she loved lay close to death, unable to get a message to her. And one native son hid out in the hills above town, having returned in Rebel gray to fight childhood friends.

The true story of the braided lives of these three people -- Jennie Wade, Jack Skelly, and Wes Culp -- is told in vivid detail against the horrifying backdrop of the battle at Gettysburg, which took place 150 years ago this summer. The three had grown up together, but by the time war came to their hometown, their lives had taken surprising paths. Despite whispered gossip about Jennie's family and her violent, thieving father, she and Jack had fallen in love, and Jack had gone off to war with the Union army. Wes had left his family, moved to the South, and renounced his kinsmen by joining "Stonewall" Jackson's brigade. When he finally came home, he did so as a traitor.

This moving and cinematically descriptive tale shows a personal and tragically fateful side of war. Mockenhaupt takes us inside the homes of Gettysburg, where snipers lurked in attics, families hid in cellars, and bullets flew through the house where Jennie baked her bread. And he guides us through the dusty streets, where panicked soldiers ran for cover and dead men and horses rotted under the hot July sun.

Written with the clarity and empathy of a writer who understands war, this is an intimate story of the largest battle ever fought on American soil, in which 160,000 men descended on a town of 2,500 to kill each other. It is a brutal, heartbreaking tale, told through the experiences of the residents and hapless soldiers caught in the chaos. Mockenhaupt poignantly reminds us why Gettysburg is the one battle that deservedly remains engraved in all of our minds.

About the Author: Brian Mockenhaupt is the author of the Byliner Original The Living and the Dead, winner of the 2013 Michael Kelly Award and a finalist for the 2013 National Magazine Award in Feature Writing. He is a contributing editor at Esquire, Outside, and Reader's Digest and is the nonfiction editor at the Journal of Military Experience. He served two tours in Iraq as an infantryman with the 10th Mountain Division. Since leaving the U.S. Army in 2005, he has written extensively on military and veteran affairs, reporting from Afghanistan and Iraq, hometowns, and hospitals.