Yellow September

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A01=Shannon Terry Wiley
American history
Army Corps of Engineers
Author_Shannon Terry Wiley
Category=FC
Category=FJ
Category=FRH
community
Daughters of the Cross
death
devotion
disease
duty
epidemics
epistolary fiction
eq_bestseller
eq_fiction
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_romance
Eugene Woodruff
family
fever
forthcoming
Great Raft
historical fiction
historical romance
history
Howard Society
Iowa
logjam
Louisiana
love
nineteenth century
Oakland Cemetery
outbreak
pandemic
perseverance
plagues
public health
Red River
resilience
romance
Shreveport
sickness
Silver Bayou
Southern history
The Aid
The Shreveport Times
the South
twentieth century
yellow fever
Yellow Fever Mound
Yellow Jack

Product details

  • ISBN 9798992741353
  • Dimensions: 152 x 228mm
  • Publication Date: 19 May 2026
  • Publisher: Susan Schadt Press, LLC
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In a heartwarming story of love, loss, and perseverance, debut author Shannon Terry Wiley chronicles the experiences of those in Shreveport, Louisiana, during the September 1873 outbreak of yellow fever, which ultimately killed over a thousand individuals. Weaving together fictional storylines and real history, Wiley paints a vivid picture of the unspeakable tragedy and the people who lived through it.

Through multiple points of view, Yellow September narrates the fortunes of those in the fever-wracked town. Two brothers, George and Eugene, find themselves far from their Midwestern roots while working for the Army Corps of Engineers. Sent to battle a massive logjam blocking the Red River, the pair find themselves grappling with two very different commitments. Meanwhile, Katherine, a farm girl living along the Silver Bayou with her family, who are still grieving the wartime death of her father, faces a difficult choice with consequences that echo throughout her life. Others, like Dr. Dalzell, a pastor and doctor in town, and Eleanor and David, parents fleeing the fever, bring a nuanced perspective to the experiences of those swept up in the outbreak.

With epistolary touches throughout, the novel is a testament to the enduring love of family—those we are born with and those we choose—and tells a profound story of duty, devotion, and community.

Shannon Terry Wiley is a Louisiana native with deep roots in Southern storytelling. She earned her English degree from LSU and an MA in Creative Writing from Sam Houston State University. After more than thirty years as a high school English teacher, she now brings her love of history and place to the page. When she’s not writing, Shannon enjoys reading on the porch, fishing Louisiana backwaters, spoiling her rescue pup, Dante—and her grandchildren, Waylon and Mae. This is her debut novel.

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