Girls of '64 by Emilie Benson Knipe and Alden Arthur Knipe

(10 User reviews)   1351
By Aiden Simon Posted on May 7, 2026
In Category - Bottom Shelf
Knipe, Alden Arthur, 1870-1950 Knipe, Alden Arthur, 1870-1950
English
Imagine discovering a diary from over sixty years ago, filled with secrets your own grandmother might have hidden. That's the electrifying premise of *Girls of '64* by Emilie Benson Knipe and Alden Arthur Knipe. It's not your typical historical tale. This book drops you right into the heart of the American Civil War, but all from a teenager's point of view. Josephine, or 'Josie' as everyone calls her, is a young girl desperate for a hero. That's when she meets Captain Ivanhoe — a dashing Confederate officer — and promptly falls head-over-heels for him. But her brother and her father are staunch Union men fighting against the South. Talk about a family drama that actually threatens to split them apart. Suddenly, Josie is trapped in a mystery that’s tangled around romance, betrayal, and maybe even honor. Is Ivanhoe the man she thinks he is? What if he’s been hiding something serious? This book dives deep into that nerve-wracking tension between loyalty to family and passion for someone your family hates. There’s danger lurking behind every letter, every secret glance, every muffled message smuggled in a loaf of bread. If you love stories that make you whisper just like the characters, this one’s pure gold.
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The Story

Girls of '64 takes you back to a divided Pennsylvania during the Civil War. Our girl, Josephine Ward, is sixteen, rebellious, and bored by the whole 'brother fighting brother' talk around her dinner table. Then a mysterious wounded Confederate soldier arrives at the house — but of course he’s handsome and has a tragic story, so naturally her stomach flips. Turns out, that longing isn’t just romance. It puts everybody on edge. Her protective brother spies on them, her quiet sister becomes nervous, and Mom acts stone-cold silent. Secrets rapidly build. Josie begins running small errands—delivering messages and bringing food — little acts that feel more and more like high-risk spying.

She’s brave but also brash, and boy, does she trip into trouble fast. What you think is a typical secret beau drama shifts into a slow-burn suspense. As Northern soldiers tighten patrols, every decision feels like a potential trap. The entire family walks on eggshells, especially when Josie discovers someone’s reading her private journal. At the story’s boiling point, she is forced to finally name what — and whom — she’s really risking.

Why You Should Read It

Honestly, Girls of '64 shocked me — in the best way. It’s not blunt about how terrifying that war was at home; it doesn’t do bloody battlefield scenes. It’s so personal. We’re right there in that claustrophobic farmhouse, choosing to either be silent or stab the public loyalty thing. Josie feels powerfully real: she’s messy, distractible, eats cookies dirty-handed, cries behind the barn, and gets butterflies. That captain is relatable too, not just some cardboard charming devil. But the real star is the rising terror inside her home — she thinks about doing right, doing wrong, betray, love, betrayal, duty — all while trying not to burn alive in a hearth fire she herself lit. This book scared me to put characters in splits between society and heart. Plus, if you adore letters, codes, and bird-feet-vanishing-hiding-flag notes... this humming book pings them hard.

Final Verdict

This read is basically made for several tribes. First, go grab this if you worship Little Women crossed paths with a miniature historical spy thriller — same quiet, tidy moral crisis-blasts genre, but about espionage inside parlors. And, pull up this book if standard girl-falls-for-enemy sounds tooth-rotting but still want the tension splintering at the core about trust. Also historians, yes this fakes exactly like real talk for ordinary people — farmers, hunters, daughters — muddling horrors not debated later; lived in confused boots and slight rooms. I would press copy into stockings of smartish middle grader all the way up adults fascinated by family torn by revolution… but calm yours expectations: no big army parade counts blow, brace rather for one terribly sad stack of un-worded love letters



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Christopher Brown
1 year ago

It’s rare to find such a well-structured narrative nowadays, the logic behind each conclusion is easy to follow and verify. This exceeded my expectations in almost every way.

Michael Wilson
2 years ago

It’s rare to find such a well-structured narrative nowadays, the bibliography and references suggest a high level of research and authority. I feel much more confident in my knowledge after finishing this.

Joseph Davis
9 months ago

Thought-provoking and well-organized content.

Patricia Brown
9 months ago

Comparing this to other titles in the same genre, the logic behind each conclusion is easy to follow and verify. A rare gem in a sea of mediocre content.

Richard Anderson
5 months ago

Clear, concise, and incredibly informative.

5
5 out of 5 (10 User reviews )

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