ALA Booklist
(Mon Feb 01 00:00:00 CST 2016)
Desperate to help support his mother and escape his cruel uncle, Stephen, 13, secretly enlists in the Civil War in 1863, following in the footsteps of his brother, Robert, killed fighting for the Union. Although Stephen is too young to be a soldier, he is not too young to use his skills as a bugler. After suffering defeat in a skirmish, Stephen and other soldiers are sent to a prison near Selma, Alabama. Stephen's first-person account vividly describes the horrific conditions they endured, but the trials he faces are only beginning: he is eventually sent home aboard the doomed steamship Sultana. This is fiction, but Stephen is based on a real person, and many details and events are based on diary and journal accounts. Readers unfamiliar with the Sultana disaster may be shocked to know more people died here than in the sinking of the Titanic. The realistic situations and feelings, viewed through the eyes of a young bugler, will appeal to readers who like war stories.
Horn Book
(Sat Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2017)
This fictionalized account of Union Army bugle boy Stephen's combat and prisoner-of-war experiences during the Civil War is unflinching in its depiction of the horrors he survives after enlisting at age thirteen. The tragic explosion of the steamboat Sultana, carrying thousands of Union soldiers home, provides the final calamity--one that's been overshadowed by Lincoln's assassination in most histories.
School Library Journal
(Tue Mar 01 00:00:00 CST 2016)
Gr 5-8 In this highly relatable work of historical fiction, Shoulders brings to life one of the darkest chapters in American history: the Civil War. The narrative revolves around 13-year-old Stephen Gaston, who manages to enlist in the Union Army to support his mother, despite being underage. As a personal bugler for a major in the Ninth Indiana Cavalry, Stephen must act as his company's timekeeperboth during daily activities and on the battlefield. The story is told from Stephen's point of view and is full of historical details. As the character experiences training, battle, and imprisonment, readers are privy to what it must have been like to experience war from a soldier's perspective. Like young Stephen, most enlistees are eager to "see the elephant" (be part of a battle), but their excitement fades as the realities of mosquitoes, heat, and constant drilling set in. The novel covers very little of the Battle of Sulphur Branch Trestle, instead focusing on the horrendous conditions after the Ninth is forced to surrender. Life in "Camp Morgan" is almost unimaginable: the men must deal with outbreaks of dysentery and lice, flooding has made proper sheltering impossible, and overcrowding makes food so scarce that the men resort to eating rats. Through so much misery, the author is still able to evoke feelings of empathy and hopefulness. Faith in humanity is demonstrated throughout: soldiers unselfishly make sacrifices to take care of one another, and even the guards, whose lives are not much better than the prisoners', are presented in a sympathetic light. VERDICT A sensitive and detailed portrayal of a Civil War soldier's life. Sherry J. Mills, Hazelwood East High School, St. Louis