I read this book (actually two books in one) for the Popsugar category of "a book tied to your ancestry". One of my many-times-great-grandfathers was John Leonard Randal, one of the Senators in the Republic of Texas. Like him, the characters in these two novels came to Texas from Tennessee in the 1830's to seek land. The first of these two novels is about their migration to Texas and subsequent participation in the battles of Goliad and San Jacinto (with a brief summary of the Battle of the Alamo). The second is about the time after the end of the Texas Revolution when the survivors went back to their land and rebuilt. Both were good stories that sweep you right along. For some reason the first one is written in the first person by one of two brothers from Tennessee. The second one is also about him, but is written in the third person. I'm not sure why Kelton chose to do it that way, but both are effective. And both of them discuss the war and the battles without being sentimental or glorifying them. Both are unsparing about the racial prejudice against Mexicans, even those who fought side by side against Santa Anna. And both bring the history of Texas to life.