
Pete Chaney,
author of Valley of the Mules, looks over a First Edition with co-publishers
Alison and Dave Hixson of Graphic Web in Trenton, GA. The novel is set in
the early 1800s and has Ross’ Landing, Lookout Mountain and the Tennessee
River as a background. Photo by Wes Schultz
Valley of the Mules historical novel
tells story of developing valley area
Ross’ Landing, Lookout Mountain and the Tennessee River are the background for a new historical novel by local author Pete Chaney. Valley of the Mules is the story of developing America during the turbulent days of the early 1800s.
The War of 1812, the Creek Indian War of 1813-1814, slave revolts and the Trail of Tears are seen through the lives of fictional characters mixed with the titans who built the nation. John Ross, Andrew Jackson, Aaron Burr, Davy Crockett and their contemporaries join the people of the author’s imagination.
The trade paperback is published by IPS Publishing of Chattanooga in collaboration with Graphic Web of Trenton. It sells for $14.95 and will be available through local bookstores and over the Internet.
The story begins in 1784, when the leaders who had just won the war for freedom were wrestling with drafts of a constitution and reaches to the Trail of Tears in 1838 and the birth of Chattanooga. It follows two immigrant families from Europe settling on the Georgia coast and migrating to the Lookout Mountain area.
“More truth can be told through fiction than non-fiction, where known facts limit the complete telling of a story,” explained Chaney, who has edited local Commercial Network magazine. “I wanted an unvarnished story of the stormy days that saw America’s beginning. There were times of pride, and of shame.
“My research stripped many icons, like Andrew Jackson and Thomas Jefferson, of their legendary status, and showed their Machiavellian side. I wanted to show the times with honesty, not a fairy tale of happy slaves and peaceful settling of Indian lands.”
The author said the shame of slavery could only be matched by the disgrace of the seizure of Indian lands when they were forced to migrate to Oklahoma in the dead of winter, with thousands dying along the way.
“I am very grateful to Dave and Alison Hixson of Graphic Web for seeing the potential of the novel and joining in the publication,” the author declared. “I am thankful for them and I hope the readers will appreciate the effort to put this story in print.”
A writer and newsman who began his career in 1950 as a copy boy with the Norfolk Virginian Pilot and has been a daily editor and published weeklies, he spent some 20 years researching and writing Valley of the Mules. Chaney also wrote the million seller One Day at a Time, the biography of singer Cristy Lane for her husband Lee Stoller.
Further information is available at www.iipspublishing.net.