The Better Angels of Our Nature
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
General William T. Sherman finds a waif, Jesse, outside camp just before the Battle of Shiloh. Jesse, who wants to learn about being a soldier, helps out in the hospital tent. Jesse's personal attention and gentle touch is "angel-like," providing comfort and understanding to the injured. Cassandra Campbell's soft, feminine voice is an unusual selection for such a setting. Yet the softness of her vocal range modulates the horrors of war depicted in this novel. Campbell works hard to convince the listener she is a suitable narrator. As the officers take Jesse under their wing, a surprise awaits. Angelic qualities or not, war is no place for this soft-spoken child. M.B.K. (c) AudioFile 2007, Portland, Maine
July 17, 2006
A London native and self-described Civil War autodidact, Gylanders begins her U.S. debut on the eve of the Battle of Shiloh when the Union general William Tecumseh Sherman finds a young boy in oversized blues hiding in the bushes. The boy will say only that he's Jesse Davis, an orphan who comes from "far from here." Jesse is persistent in wanting to stay on, however, and Sherman puts him to work as an orderly in the field hospital. Sherman soon discovers (rather awkwardly) that Jesse is, in fact, a girl of about 15. He threatens to banish her, but never follows through, as Jesse seems talismanic: at Shiloh, Sherman has four horses shot out from under him and survives. The action moves to the siege of Vicksburg and concludes with Sherman's army off to Chattanooga (which surely means a sequel, since it puts us at November 1863, more than a year before war's end). Gylanders knows the era thoroughly (there were several such gender switches documented during the war) and writes convincingly about the horrors of the battlefield and the field hospital. In the enigmatic Jesse, she has a character who gives a compelling perspective on the times.
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