Thursday, August 2, 2007

March by Geraldine Brooks

First sentence:

"October 21, 1861

This is what I write to her: The clouds tonight embossed the sky."

Description:

"As the North reels under a series of unexpected defeats during the dark first year of the war, one man leaves behind his family to aid the Union cause. His experiences will utterly change his marriage and challenge his most ardently held beliefs. Riveting and elegant as it is meticulously researched, March is an extraordinary novel woven out of the lore of American history.

From Louisa May Alcott’s beloved classic Little Women, Geraldine Brooks has taken the character of the absent father, March, who has gone off to war, leaving his wife and daughters to make do in mean times. To evoke him, Brooks turned to the journals and letters of Bronson Alcott, Louisa May’s father—a friend and confidant of Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau. In her telling, March emerges as an idealistic chaplain in the little known backwaters of a war that will test his faith in himself and in the Union cause as he learns that his side, too, is capable of acts of barbarism and racism. As he recovers from a near mortal illness, he must reassemble his shattered mind and body and find a way to reconnect with a wife and daughters who have no idea of the ordeals he has been through.

Spanning the vibrant intellectual world of Concord and the sensuous antebellum South, March adds adult resonance to Alcott’s optimistic children’s tale to portray the moral complexity of war, and a marriage tested by the demands of extreme idealism—and by a dangerous and illicit attraction. A lushly written, wholly original tale steeped in the details of another time, March secures Geraldine Brooks’s place as an internationally renowned author of historical fiction."

My thoughts:

I enjoyed this historical fiction set in the early 19th century and in the early years of the U.S. Civil War. I liked reading about the Underground Railroad, John Brown, and the transcendentalist movement (Thoreau, Emerson). I think it helps to have read Little Women first so March's descriptions of his wife and daughters become more familiar.

Date read: 7/30/2007
Book #: 68
Rating: 3* = good
Genre: Historical Fiction

ISBN-10: 0670033359
ISBN-13: 9780670033355
Publisher: Viking
Year: 2004
# of Pages: 288
Binding: Hardcover
LibraryThing Page

4 comments:

Marg said...

I really enjoyed this when I read it,and was glad when it won the Pulitzer!

Kate said...

thanks for the great review. I am going to put it on my list!!

krin said...

Glad you liked the review and I hope you like the book!

Booklogged said...

I really like this book, too. Didn't know it won the Pultizer. That's great.