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Hardcover A Soldier's Book

ISBN: 1579620094

ISBN13: 9781579620097

A Soldier's Book

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good*

*Best Available: (ex-library, missing dust jacket)

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Book Overview

Ira Cahill Stevens, a young Union soldier taken captive by Confederates during the Battle of the Wilderness in May of 1864, finds himself fighting a new battle as the novel opens. One waged within the... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Outstanding Civil War Novel

I've read quite a few Civil War novels, and this is one of the best. It gives us a good look at what it was like to be stuck in what was probably the worst of the Civil War prison camps (and they were all horrible), and to start losing touch with reality. I found myself wanting to help the main character out of his terrible predicament. This is one of those books you just can't put down, and one that you don't want to end. She's got a great story to tell, and her writing style is outstanding.This is one of the best novels I've read in years.

A REMINDER OF THE NOBLE BENT OF THE HUMAN SPIRIT

Drawing from the daily journal of a Union prisoner of war, Joanna Higgins has crafted a spare, intense, incredibly moving debut novel, a Civil War drama in which historically accurate details bring fictional characters to resonant life. It is not amiss to equate her offering with the quintessential record of those experiences, Andersonville by MacKinlay Kantor for Ms. Higgins exhibits an estimable command of research, as well as a munificent gift for lyrical elegiac prose. Scenes of prison camp life are heart-bruising as seen through the eyes of men struggling to survive in a morass of death and disease. "...there are eleven thousand of us in this pen of about twenty acres. And four of those swamp." Plagued by vermin, lack of sanitation, self-administered medical care, raiders (comrades who steal their scant possessions for barter) and the cruelty of guards, many captives soon die, even beg to be shot. Yet, in spite of intolerable conditions there is a thread of hope - not Emily Dickinson's hope, "the thing with feathers," but the hope of those pushed beyond their physical and emotional limits: "The burn and pulsing of it. That is hope doing its work." A young Union soldier and former apothecary's apprentice, Ira Cahill Stevens, is taken prisoner in 1864, during the time when passionate arguments have brought prisoner exchanges to a standstill. Thus, prison camps have become intolerably overcrowded and tantamount to a death sentence, abysmal sties where soldiers switch allegiance for food and clothing. Incarcerated with only his "Soldier's Book for Leisure Moments," a small handbook "intended for the young Christian soldier going forth `in deference of his country,'" his father's pen, a silver spoon, and needle and thread, Ira is aghast and sickened, tenuously clinging to the prospect of a prisoner exchange. Ira's sustenance is found in his ever present book, "...the only thing that helps me fall asleep," and his comrades. For guidance the young soldier looks to an older man, Gus, a preacher, who kneels to say his daily prayers then pats the ground and falls asleep. When Ira grows ill, Gus reads to him from the Bible. Ira hears "...words that don't mean a thing but the sound of `em nice." Gus's counterpoint is Marinus, an incorrigible cynic, who relishes the sound of his own words. There is also Louie with his "ferrety laugh" who tries to tunnel to freedom, and Willy, "...skinny but with a little boy's plumped up face yet. Hair so red it makes his skin pink. Jug ears." Eventually Ira is moved to a military prison in Florence, South Carolina, where he becomes a paroled prisoner volunteer in the hospital overseen by a compassionate Dr. Strother. Ira comes to hold the medic in such esteem that he vows not to try to escape, "...my word of honor that I will not violate my parole by going beyond one-half mile from the hospital limits." But when he is sent into surrounding woods to forage for berries, he walks on "pine need

The Perfect Marriage of Fiction and History

This is a beautifully written book. The rare case of a historical novel where the importance of the characters does not get overshadowed by massive information dumps. History and story are elegantly intertwined. The writing puts you in the grim reality of Andersonville and shows how faith will fight to survive amid the horrors of war. One of the best novels of the year. Can't wait for Higgin's next one.

wonderfully written, historically accurate story

A SOLDIER'S BOOK is a small marvel. Written with a combination of historical accuracy and spiritual precision, it is the story of anyone who has felt imprisoned by a world not in our control. The language is beautiful even when the visions are not. This is a book to be read, and then reread. It is a small masterpiece of writing.

Better than "Cold Mountain".

This book is VERY good. It puts you in Andersonville.
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