It was dangerous to be an abolitionist in the Deep South in the mid-19th century. But opposing slavery and helping runaway slaves escape toward Mexico or Canada was particularly risky in Texas in the final months before the Civil War. The state’s rugged, open landscape offered few places to hide, and runaways often had to cover great distances just to get from one safe house to the next. Meanwhile, helping slaves flee or simply being suspected of anti-slavery feelings could get you and family members killed or your home or store torched by vigilantes. Henry Chappell’s recent third novel, <em>Silent We Stood</em>, paints an engrossing, fact-based and frequently tense portrait of slavery and anti-slavery sentiments in North Texas in 1860." — <i>Dallas Morning News</i>