A Chat with Cora Scott from Texas Reclaimed by Sherry Shindelar

Cora, please tell us about your life:

I live a few miles outside of Weatherford, TX on the edge of the Texas frontier. During the Civil War the line of settlement rolled back more than one hundred miles. The men were off at war, and the Comanches and Kiowa knew it. They raided relentlessly seeking to take back what had been taken from them. My family came to this area from Tennessee in the mid-1850’s after my father disgraced the family name by cheating at gambling. My mother loved him dearly, and she was willing to follow him into the wilderness and beyond.

Starting a ranch in Parker County was dangerous, but my family came to love the land. My father and uncle built a double-log cabin, two cabins joined together by a wide hallway, with heavy doors protecting either end. Our cabin, barns, and grounds were like a small fortress. We were ready for attack. And attacks came. 

Wow! That sounds like a big undertaking! What other trials did you face?

It was my father’s drinking and the war that really ravaged our family.

By the time the Civil War ended, there was no one left but me and little half-brother Charlie. Charlie was my father’s secret son from a Comanche woman. Right about the time the war started, she brought the boy to my family for us to raise. My mother, saint that she was, took him in and loved him like her own son. My father was a different story, could hardly even look at the boy.

After my parents’ passed, some folks said I should go back to Tennessee where I had kin, forget the ranch. But these were the same folks who’d been wagging their tongues about Charlie for years, especially since my family moved to town during the war.

How sad, Cora. I’m sorry for your loss. What did you do next? 

I wasn’t having anything of it. I packed Charlie up, and we left the rented room and returned to the weathered ranch. My family had sweated and bled for that land. It had become our home. Besides, I couldn’t give hope that Jeb, my older brother who’d left home after a falling out with our pa years before, would return. Jeb joined the Union forces during the war, fought as a Yankee, but that didn’t make no mind to me. He was my brother, the best friend I’d ever had.

That was brave of you and Charlie. What happened when you returned to the ranch? 

After our return to the ranch, some land speculator showed up claiming Pa owed him a gambling debt and had signed over the ranch as a guarantee. The scoundrel aimed to steal our home, willing to go to court to do so. Well, I wasn’t having nothing of it. Days later, I headed into town and offered to sell him a third of the property as payment, but the greedy scum wanted all of it. Dear Lord in heaven, I didn’t know what I was going to do. But I couldn’t, wouldn’t give up.

Good for you for not giving up! What happened next?

Then, a stranger showed up. His fine-threaded sack coat and trousers covered with dust, as if he’d traveled a long way. The slightest trace of a limp in his left leg, he walked slowly across the furrowed rows of freshly turned dirt where I stood whacking away at clods. A lock or two of dark brown hair dipped onto his forehead beneath his slouch hat. He carried himself with the firmness of chin and posture that made me think he’d probably been an officer during the war, but there was a haggardness about his features that bespoke a man weary of battle.

As soon as he spoke, I knew he was a Yankee, not a trace of Southern in his speech. And his words about knocked me to my knees. My brother Jeb was dead, and had sent this man, his friend, in his stead to look after us…

As if I needed looking after. Of course, I greatly appreciated his coming and bringing word of Jeb, and I drank up every word he had to say about their friendship. However, the man, Ben McKenzie was his name, tried to spare us the gruesome details of what it was like for him and Jeb in Andersonville Prison Camp, but I could see the soul-deep shadows in his hazel eyes. A gaze that quickened my pulse and drew me in, when common sense said run. 

Ben McKenzie needed to head right back to Pennsylvania where he’d come from, but he was a stubborn man, not prone to listening to reason.

I’d love to learn more about this Ben McKenzie, but we’ll have to save that for another time. Sounds like he showed up right when you could use the help. 

About Sherry Shindelar: Originally from Tennessee, Sherry loves to take her readers into the past and share her faith. She is an avid student of the Civil War and the Old West. She’s always been a romantic at heart. When she is not busy writing, she is an English professor working to pass on her love of writing to her students. Sherry is an award-winning writer: 2023 Genesis finalist, Maggie finalist, and Crown finalist. She currently resides in Minnesota with her husband of thirty-eight years (Their romance started on a city bus on Valentine’s Day). She has three grown children and three grandchildren.

You can find Sherry and her book online at these links.

Instagram: sherryshindelarauthor

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Sherry Shindelar Author Goodreads author page

Bookbub author page

Find Texas Reclaimed HERE.

Meet Eli Boswell from The Montana Gold Mine by Tim Piper

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About the Book:

In Spring 1874, the American economy is descending into a depression, following the collapse of Jay Cooke’s financial empire. Amid the chain of bank and business failures set off by Cooke’s bankruptcy, Jubilee Walker struggles to keep Warner and Walker Outfitters solvent.  

Jubil’s grand plans for developing Yellowstone National Park into a popular tourist destination were dashed when Cooke’s business plan failed, but he is still determined to fulfill the park’s potential—not to mention his promise to his friend White Dog to end the corruption affecting the well-being of the people living on the Crow reservation. 

When Jubil solicits support from the highest levels of government, he sets off a chain of events that puts not only him but the ones he loves most in grave danger. What is the nature of the secret Jubil’s nemesis is hiding? And how far will he go to protect it? Book four in the Jubilee Walker series is loosely based on historical events.


Welcome to Novel PASTimes! We are pleased you stopped by today.

Thanks for inviting me.

Tell us a bit about yourself.

My name is Elijah Boswell, but everyone calls me Eli. I’m twenty-one years old. I have a twin brother named Isaac, Ike for short. Our sister, Nelly, is two years older than us. That’s not her Christian name, but if I told you her real name, she’d be angry and get revenge on me somehow. We grew up in Bloomington, Illinois, which is where our parents still live. Our father works in a carriage shop and is a very skilled carpenter. Our mother makes the best fried chicken and apple pie you’ll ever taste, and I’m not the only one who thinks so.

How did you become acquainted with Jubilee Walker?

I’ve known Jubil for as long as I can remember. Our family had a farm outside of Bloomington for a while, and Jubil’s parents owned the farm next door. We went to school together. He and Nelly have always been best friends. Even though he’s three years old than my brother and me, he tolerates us—which says more about his character than you might think. While he was gone on his first adventure to the West with Major John Wesley Powell, he asked me and Ike to take care of his property, and we accidently burned down his farmhouse and barn. When I think of it, I can hardly believe he’s still friendly toward us. But I guess we made up for it. And I guess it’s lucky for us that he and Nelly turned sweet on each other. Now they’re married, so Jubil is my brother-in-law. He trusts me and Ike enough now to let us work for his business, Warner and Walker Outfitters.

What is the nature of your employment with Mr. Walker?

Our first job for Jubil was helping him and Luke Warner, his business partner at the time, start up their store in Bloomington. Ike and I worked for no pay for a year to repay the damage to Jubil’s homestead. After our debt was paid, we kept working for Jubil, because we like the work, and we’re good enough at it that Jubil wants to keep us on. Ike helps with the management issues and new product design, and I’m the top salesman and stock clerk.

The problem is that an enemy of Jubil’s—a man Jubil ran into trouble with while he was exploring in Yellowstone in 1871—hired someone out of spite to burn down the store. Luke died in that fire, and Jubil moved us to Council Bluffs, Iowa, to take over Luke’s father’s store. As much as I enjoy working in the store in Council Bluffs, what I really want to do is help Jubil with his adventure tour business. This summer, we’re leading our first group of tourists along the same route Jubil took in 1868 while he was exploring in Colorado with Major Powell.

Is Warner and Walker Outfitters a successful business?

It was, up until last year. The whole economy’s gone into a depression, and we’ve been struggling. Jubil was deeply involved with Jay Cooke, whose investment house went bankrupt after the Northern Pacific Railroad deal fell apart. Jubil almost lost Warner and Walker entirely, because the market has gone cold. The stylish business and leisure travelers who used to buy our goods aren’t buying anymore, so we’ve been focusing on more basic goods. Jubil also has connections in the military, so he’s trying to get more supply business at the forts within reach. He’s considering expanding into the Montana Territory by putting a new store in Bozeman to supply Fort Ellis. That store would also serve as a base for the adventure tours we’ll offer into Yellowstone Park. The Crow reservation is nearby, and we might eventually be able to get the supply contract there, but there are some issues Jubil needs to get resolved there first.

Wasn’t Jubilee Walker involved in some trouble in Bozeman a few years ago?

Well, that’s true, but none of it was Jubil’s fault. Back in 1871, after the Washburn Expedition into Yellowstone, Jubil and the other explorers vowed to lobby the government to make it a national park to protect it from being exploited. A man in Bozeman named Phineas Black took exception to that plan, because he owned gold mines near the Yellowstone Basin and stood to lose a good bit if the government took the land for the park. That wasn’t all Black took exception to. Jubil was determined to stop Black’s mercantile, which was supplying the Crow reservation, from defrauding both the tribe and the government. Black ended up drawing Jubil into a gunfight, and Jubil—with the help of his friend, the Crow scout White Dog—prevailed.

Are all those issues settled now?

Not entirely. Congress managed to declare Yellowstone a national park, but there’s no funding to protect it. I know Jubil is concerned about that and doing what he can to influence the situation. Meanwhile, there’s still fraud going on at the Crow reservation. What are the Crow people supposed to do when they’re sent rotten grain and sickly livestock? How can they survive? With Phineas Black out of the picture, we’re wondering who’s behind the problem this time. Jubil’s not eager to draw any attention his way if he doesn’t have to. He’s hoping one of his government friends can solve the problem. Once that happens, we can win the supply contract for the reservation and open a new store in Bozeman.

Do you plan to stay with Warner and Walker Outfitters?

If everything goes as planned. If we open a new store in Bozeman, I’ll likely be the one to manage it and leave the Council Bluffs store to Ike. I also have high hopes for our adventure tour business. If the tour this summer goes well, it could help our stores weather the slow economy. I like working with Jubil. He has bold ideas, and he’s not afraid to do what others are too timid to take on.


Tim Piper is retired from a long career in Information Technology and has been a lifelong hobbyist musician. In his earlier days he was an avid hiker and backcountry camper, but his adventures these days are less strenuous and more comfortable. He began his education at Illinois State University as an English major, but life circumstances put him on a more pragmatic path, and he graduated with a BS in Business Admin, a degree he finds appropriately named. He lives in Bloomington, Illinois. 
Learn more at www.timpiper-author.com or follow him on Facebook.

Chat with Valentine’s Reflection from the novel Following Jimmy Valentine by Jeff Flaster © in 2025 Melodic Music LLC

From Amazon: A full-cast audiobook musical told entirely through story and song.

Notorious jewel thief Jimmy Valentine (Hadley Fraser: “Phantom”, “City of Angels”) swears he’s going straight this time. But Jimmy has baggage that won’t fit in his suitcase of burglar’s tools. Soon after his release from prison, he’s back to his old habits.

Disillusioned New Orleans detective Jen Price (Kerry Ellis: “Wicked”) wants to catch Jimmy Valentine—and feel like a hero again. But Jimmy isn’t the villain she’d hoped he’d be. While hiding in a small town, Jimmy falls in love with Annabel Adams (Celinde Schoenmaker: “Guys and Dolls”). For the first time, Valentine dares to believe in a new life.

But is it too late?

Author Jeff Flaster’s reinvention of O. Henry’s classic short story combines world-class performances with a score that blends classical, jazz and classic rock into melodic storytelling that stays with listeners after the final note.

Cast album available on major music-streaming platforms.


U.S. Bureau of (redacted), 

File from 1922: 

In (redacted), Louisiana, 

Wearing a trench coat and fedora, Op13 emerges from the shadows of the morning mist. 

Henry Spencer? 

Yes? 

Let’s talk.  

Who are you? 

That’s classified. Call me Op13. But listen, I know what you are

So what? I’m just a humble shoe-store owner. 

Op displays her Bureau card. 

Oh. I’ve been expecting you. Decent pic for Bureau issue.  

Thanks. I like my job. 

Me too.  

As good a place to start as any. First, though, for the record, please. You’re Jimmy Valentine’s Reflection? 

Yes. And I’ve come through the mirror, changing places with him, but only temporarily, with the alias Henry Spencer. 

And you like your job because? 

I’m proud that I am helping people when they reinvent themselves.

The Bureau people worry sometimes that you help a bit too much. 

No need to fret. It’s only natural.  When you look into the mirror, what do you hear

Wait. Is that you

No. Of course not. You don’t need us. But it’s not that different. When you look at your reflection, you might see only what’s there now, as you prepare to face the day. But sometimes, you’ll be looking deeper, not only at what is, but also at what you could be. 

What. Not who? 

Yes. We really do mean what

Don’t you just mean “find yourself”? 

No. We help you make yourself, changing what you can, for instance, What you do, and what it means to be the person in your body; How you feel, how you react. but also learning to accept the things that you can never change– Your past, especially. That’s the toughest. But other aspects too. It varies. Everyone’s a little different. 

So as for Jimmy Valentine? 

Valentine is very different. Jimmy was a jewel thief. He got some headlines. No, a lot.  He finally heard me in his jail cell on the day of his release. He swore that he’d go straight this time. But he has shell shock from the War.  So though I tried, he stole again.  Eventually I persuaded him  to leave his sculpted flower behind.

And did that help? 

Not by itself. But then he met Miss Annabel, and now he’s going straight at last.  

So then you’re done, and wrapping up? 

Not yet. There are some complications. Detective Price is looking for him.  Jen has troubles of her own, but not Reflection troubles. No, A different, shall we say, Division, Is working with Detective Price. When she made rank, she felt heroic. She wants to feel that way again, So she’s pursuing Valentine, Because he is notorious. she doesn’t know that he’s gone straight.  When she finds him, and she will, Will she care? I want to be there. 

You know you can’t be. 

Are you sure? 

Yes. I’m sorry. 

No, I know. I’ll do everything I can to get him ready for that day, shen he will face his greatest challenge. 

But you’ll be gone before she finds him? 

Yes, I will. You have my word.  

I’ll take it. I was never here. I hope to say the same for you.

You can, because for me, it’s true.


JEFF FLASTER is a New Yorker by birth whose parents were both mathematicians. They had saved since Flaster was born so that they could send him to MIT, and were not pleased when college-aged Flaster asked if he could major in music instead of math. So Flaster made music a minor, but it remained a major in his life. The fact that he is a tenor gave him easy entrée into choirs and ensembles, and he performed regularly in a group at MIT, The Chorallaries. He has also performed at The Kennedy Center with the Choral Arts Society of Washington, and at Tanglewood with the Tanglewood Festival Chorus. Flaster produced three recordings of his original compositions, available on Apple Music. Recently, inspired by O. Henry’s sunnier version of “Les Misérables,” Flaster wrote a full-length musical now called “Following Jimmy Valentine.” The 2021 version of this musical, called “Shell Shock,” was directed by Lennie Watts and can be seen on Melodic Music’s YouTube channel. Flaster’s interest in cabaret was sparked by his father, and by a course he took at 92Y with the late Collette Black. Find out more about him at https://www.melodic.com.

https://www.facebook.com/flasterTunes/, https://www.instagram.com/flaster_tunes/, https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdnoeRiLJ8I8yZmzAu-ln_w, https://www.amazon.com/Following-Jimmy-Valentine-Retrieved-Reformation/dp/B0FW5QPT36/ref=sr_1_1