Amazon.com Review
Everybody knows the story of the Alamo and the Texas victory over the Mexican army at San Jacinto, but the dramatic period that followed--the years when the Republic of Texas was not yet part of the United States--has largely been ignored. Edwin Shrake's novel makes up for that.
The Borderland is set in 1839, three years after the Alamo fell. The fledgling Republic is down on its heels, desperate for money, short on organization, lacking structure and infrastructure, and still at war with Mexico. President Lamar, as much a poet as a politician, has a plan, though: by expanding the Republic to the Pacific, he can attract the frenzy--and cash--of land speculators. He begins by going up against his enemy, Sam Houston, and moving the capital of the Republic inland from Houston to a pristine river valley in central Texas--Comanche country--that gives birth to the new city of Austin. The repercussions are enormous. To begin with, it sets off the largest Comanche war party of all time.
Weaving together a marvelous cast of characters, some real, some wholly created, Shrake renders a strong, often eerie portrait of life on the frontier and the horrors of frontier warfare. As Texas Ranger Captain Matthew Caldwell, known as "Old Paint" because of his spotted beard, leads a desperate, ragtag force against the Comanche warriors on the plains south of Austin, Romulus Swift, a half-Cherokee physician descended from Jonathan Swift, falls in love with Caldwell's young German Jewish immigrant bride. Swift is a mystical character--he's on a quest to find a mysterious, otherworldly-wise creature said to live in a cave full of Spanish gold; Caldwell is more a straight-ahead force of nature. When the two men, suspicious of each other from the get-go, must journey together into Comancheria, the palpable tension has as much to do with whether they'll kill each other as it does with whether they'll be able to make a truce with 2,000 Comanche warriors ready to wipe Austin out. Add to the mix Swift's sister, anxious to return to her Native American past after a society life in New York, and Henry Longfellow, a powerful, misogynistic, slave-holding politician who may be Texas's first serial killer, and The Borderland has the makings of a truly tall tale. Massive in scope, captivating in detail, and meticulous in its resurrection of history, Shrake's novel exhumes a forgotten era of Texas's past. --Roland Gregory
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
From Publishers Weekly
Tall tales combine with authentic historical characters in this rambling novel by the author of The Blessed McGill, describing the dramatic formative years of Texas. In the frontier town of Austin, the adventures of (fictional) half-Cherokee Dr. Romulus Swift and his beautiful sister, Cullasaja, intersect with those of a real Lone Star hero, Texas Ranger Captain Matthew Caldwell, who earned the epithet "The Paul Revere of Texas" during the Texas revolution. Other historical figures appear in abundant cameos, including Sam Houston; Chief Bow; Mirabeau B. Lamar, second president of the republic of Texas; a young Albert Sidney Johnston; and Mary Maverick, wife of the famed San Antonio livestock mogul. Add to the mix a cast of unsavory fictional players and Shrake's narrative becomes melodramatic and generally chaotic. Swift, fashioned after one of Shrake's ancestors, is possibly the most implausible character in the novel. He is on a quest to find the mysterious "apeman" held sacred by the Comanches, from whom he hopes to obtain some mystical wisdom. Meanwhile, Captain Caldwell struts uselessly around the state and anachronistically argues political correctness with Lamar, while awaiting the arrival of his mail-order German bride, Hannah. The main plotline involves the infamous Council House Massacre and Battle of the Neches, two treacherous incidents in which Lamar initiated his ultimately successful program of ousting all Indians from Texas. The book climaxes with the sensational Linnville Raid and Battle of Plum Creek, which set a pattern of warfare between Texans and Comanches for the next 35 years; while the historical events are retold aptly, the narrative thread connecting all the characters is easily lost. (Apr.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.