Geraldine Brooks
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March: A Novel by Geraldine
Brooks
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Brooks's luminous second novel, after 2001's acclaimed Year
of Wonders , imagines the Civil War experiences of Mr. March,
the absent father in Louisa May Alcott's Little Women .
An idealistic Concord cleric, March becomes a Union chaplain and
later finds himself assigned to be a teacher on a cotton plantation
that employs freed slaves, or "contraband." His narrative
begins with cheerful letters home, but March gradually reveals
to the reader what he does not to his family: the cruelty and racism
of Northern and Southern soldiers, the violence and suffering he
is powerless to prevent and his reunion with Grace, a beautiful,
educated slave whom he met years earlier as a Connecticut peddler
to the plantations. In between, we learn of March's earlier life:
his whirlwind courtship of quick-tempered Marmee, his friendship
with Emerson and Thoreau and the surprising cause of his family's
genteel poverty. When a Confederate attack on the contraband farm
lands March in a Washington hospital, sick with fever and guilt,
the first-person narrative switches to Marmee, who describes a
different version of the years past and an agonized reaction to
the truth she uncovers about her husband's life. Brooks, who based
the character of March on Alcott's transcendentalist father, Bronson,
relies heavily on primary sources for both the Concord and wartime
scenes; her characters speak with a convincing 19th-century formality,
yet the narrative is always accessible. Through the shattered dreamer
March, the passion and rage of Marmee and a host of achingly human
minor characters, Brooks's affecting, beautifully written novel
drives home the intimate horrors and ironies of the Civil War and
the difficulty of living honestly with the knowledge of human suffering.
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Book 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.
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