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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An entertaining read
`Copperhead' is the second in the `Starbuck Chronicles' and it provides the reader with all we have to come to expect from author Bernard Cornwell. If you know Cornwell's writing, this novel will not disappoint, similarly if you have never heard of the name, I would encourage you make his acquaintance.

During the Civil War a Copperhead was generally held to be a...

Published on August 29, 2000 by Simon Jackson

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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The Nathaniel Starbuck Chronicles: Part Two of Four
Nathaniel Starbuck is back again, and fighting begins anew with the Civil War at the battles of Ball's Bluff and Seven Pines. Starbuck's mettle is tested, but he is nevertheless victorious. The Confederates are still unable to deal with the fact that Starbuck is a Yankee fighting against his own people.

Inevitable, he is accused of being a spy, chased,...
Published 13 months ago by Alexandro C. Telander


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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An entertaining read, August 29, 2000
`Copperhead' is the second in the `Starbuck Chronicles' and it provides the reader with all we have to come to expect from author Bernard Cornwell. If you know Cornwell's writing, this novel will not disappoint, similarly if you have never heard of the name, I would encourage you make his acquaintance.

During the Civil War a Copperhead was generally held to be a Northerner who sympathised with the Southern cause. Within the pages of this book, although he is the son of a Boston abolitionist minister, Nathaniel Starbuck fights for the South. If you know your Civil War history - and that is no way a requirement for this novel - the action depicted within the pages of `Copperhead' takes us from Ball's Bluff near Leesburg in Virginia to Gaines Mill close to Richmond. However, the main part of the novel takes Starbuck away from the battlefield and into the arena of espionage and deceit. The book also gives us an insight into the insecurities of the Northern generals, in particular McClellan and his `spymaster' Allan Pinkerton.

There is no doubt that in Nate Starbuck, Cornwell attempts to create the heroics of Richard Sharpe (for those who don't know, Cornwell has written a whole clutch of novels about English rifleman Richard Sharpe who served both in India and the Napoleonic Wars). To some extend he has succeeded in this, although at times `Copperhead' lacks the pace of some of the Sharpe novels. Nevertheless, I enjoyed `Copperhead', it is in the main well written and informative and is without a doubt an entertaining read.

As a point of interest, although I'd recommend the reader to work his/her way through the series in order, it is not vital that you do this as each novel is self-contained.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A GREAT CIVIL WAR SERIES, April 18, 2006
This review is from: Copperhead (Paperback)
I expected the Nathaniel Starbuck Chronicles to be like the Sharpe series, but I was initially disappointed when I started reading REBEL (Book 1 of the Nathaniel Starbuck Chronicles). It took about one hundred pages to introduce the characters and setting and I almost gave up. Lucky for me I didn't. The story took off and kept me enthralled throughout with Cornwell's excellent telling of the Battle of Bull Run. I continued to be entertained in COPPERHEAD, though the action and adventure were more concerned with espionage than the confusion and horror of the battlefield.

I don't understand how some reviewers could complain that Nate Starbuck was unlikable. He grew on me as I watched him stumble and fall and learn from his mistakes to become a better person and an able officer.

I was also happily surprised to see that Mr. Cornwell introduced us to French Colonel Patrick Lasan, the son of Richard Sharpe and Lucille Castineau. Battlescarred and wearing an eyepatch, Col. Lasan is a rogue and adventurer just like his father. I wish there had been more scenes with him and Nate in the book.

All in all, this is a great Civil War series. I hope Mr. Cornwell will write another book in the Starbuck Chronicles.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars My favorite of the bunch, May 23, 2002
This review is from: Copperhead (Paperback)
As this book opens Starbuck is in trouble. He has just beem drummed out of the regiment on(false) charges of incompitance. So he travles to Richmond seeking help and too make matters worse he is frammed.

This is my favorite book in the serise. We are introduced to several new chacters
1. Gordon Swinyard(he grows on you)
2. Patrick Le'sawn(Richard Sharp's son)

I really enjoyed this book, you can always trust Cornwell to give you a good battle and to question your outlook on life as you are reading his books.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A good civil war fictional story, December 22, 2004
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This review is from: Copperhead (Paperback)
Cornwell's 2nd installment in the Starbuck Chronicles builds on the first novel. Nate Starbuck is the hero with similar characteristics as found in Cornwell's other novels.

While some reviewers find this formula tired, I find it very entertaining. With every successful novel, I grow a little fonder of Cornwell's characters.

I also enjoy the way Cornwell interposes true to life characters from the Civil war into the story.

If you are a fan of historical fiction, I recommend this series.
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The best book of a great series., July 3, 1999
By A Customer
A read, read and read some more book. If you like military history these are absolutly incredable journals to the way it was. The emotion and fears of the time are reborn in it's pages. A must read for every American.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Traitor?, April 19, 2000
"Adam is right. War does change us."

I cannot rate this book without talking about the brilliance of the whole series. Cornwell takes you from your reading room, and teleports you back to a simpler time. And you find out that it's not so simple. Set against the backdrop of the Eastern Theatre in the American Civil War, he portrays the massive carnage and greatest bravery in minute detail. You actually hear the cannons, and smell the rotting flesh of the wounded. Yet, the main plot does not take place amongst the gunfire outside. But, rather, within. It is a story of a soul, and his struggle with God, man, who he is, and what he stands for. Amidst the shouting, crying, blasting, and dieing...is a poor heart, searching for peace. I found Cornwell's protrayal of Nate Starbuck to be no less than perfect. I found myself rooting, questioning, hoping, and praying for this fictional character. For, I saw myself in Nate. The same questions, fears, and desires. When done, I walked away from this story with a different outlook on life, liberty, and what's truly important. As will you.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Intrigue in Richmond as the Union angles for a quick end to the Civil War, January 12, 2010
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This review is from: Copperhead (Paperback)
How is Nathaniel Starbuck like Richard Sharpe? Let me count the ways.

Both are tall, lean and handsome. Both are instinctive soldiers and natural leaders whom others gravitate towards. Both have weaknesses for lovely women, particularly those of questionable reputations (whom Cornwell writes so well). Both find their commands jeopardized by selfish superiors caring more about glory than winning the war. Both have key allies - usually around the rank of major - who know what they're really worth. Both can withstand torture. And both will occasionally making daring forays into enemy territory on their own authority - in Starbuck's case, into Maryland to capture a supplies shipment, because he misses real coffee. (Starbuck's coffee?) There's also a trace of O'Brian's Jack Aubrey here.

There are a few ways in which they differ. Starbuck comes from gentry, Sharpe from the gutter. Starbuck went to Yale, Sharpe learned how to read in an Indian prison. Starbuck, younger and the child of an evangelist, is more prone to attacks of religious conscience. (The more ruthless, invincible side of Sharpe is preserved by Cornwell in Thomas Truslow's character.)
And both of them, when the chips are down, are willing to kill, and it doesn't always have to do with war.

By the way, I was delighted to figure out the Sharpe-tied character in this one. He was introduced in the first Starbuck book, but I didn't pick up on it.

Anyway, the second book continues this fine Civil War series. I continue to be impressed by Cornwell's ability to capture the 19th century American scene, its sights and smells and language and ways. The Civil War provides a fine playground for him, because it so readily allows the intrigue he wove so well into the Sharpe novels, as well as a certain ambiguity enhancing realism. It's hard to vilify either side when they all speak the same language, have the same religion, separated only by blue and gray battle lines moving back and forth over Virginia. The Yankees may be overconfident and oversupplied while having yet to prove they can fight, but the Rebels, as endearing as they may be as plucky underdogs, have some odious characters of their own, particularly the spymaster de'Ath and Washington Faulconer's new second-in-command, the vile Swynyard. (Cornwell overdoes the bad-guy names a bit in this one.)

Disobeying orders, of course, Starbuck leads his men in a sudden maneuver turning the battle of Ball's Bluff - the Union's first real attempt on offense since the loss at Manassas - into a rout. But he is shortly relieved of his command as Faulconer returns to duty. Starbuck finds a government job in Richmond, putting him close to paramour Sally Truslow, now a high-class whore. Meanwhile his friend and Washington's son Adam Faulconer, disillusioned by the war's brutality and hoping to bring a quick end to the secession, starts spying for the North through Starbuck's brother James, briefly a Southern prisoner but now repatriated and attached to Allan Pinkerton's intelligence office. McClellan prepares an enormous campaign up the peninsula towards Richmond from the ocean. As he closes in on Richmond, the Rebels learn of a spy in their midst.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Great Novel, February 19, 2009
This review is from: Copperhead (Paperback)
Bernard Cornwell is one of the greatest authors of historical fiction that I have ever read. His attention to detail and his vivid description of historical events add a new dimension to the past and give the reader the opportunity to truly experience past moments.

Copperhead captures not only the saga of the civil war but the emotions of those involved and demonstrates Cornwell's capacity for capturing the heart of men. It was an excellent novel and a great addition to a remarkable series of books.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Great Historical Fiction of the War of Southern Rebellion, August 18, 2005
This review is from: Copperhead (Paperback)
You have to love the hero, Starbuck, as he continues as a Yankee fighting for Virgina. The way that Cornwell developes his character Nate Starbuck, as with Sharpe in the Richard Sharpe series, is compelling. Starbuck is not a super hero, but a good man who occasionally does bad things, but more often takes the high road in his moral decisions and is a very effective warrior and leader. Starbuck is a guy you would love to have a beer with. Cornwell also developes anti-heros effectively, making them people you love to hate. As with all Bernard Cornwell novels - a great read.
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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Behind The Scenes Look At The Civil War, November 13, 2003
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This review is from: Copperhead (Paperback)
If one is too insistent on the principal figure having a consistent psychology, then this book is not for you. It does have an interesting mix of characters, and it gave me a sense of the personal dynamics of life during the Civil War (when one thought of distance and transportation in terms of being on the back of a horse). The depiction of battle from the perspective of a regular soldier, with the killing being an entirely local phenomenon, the continuous confusion, and no picture of the greater strategy (are we actually dying for some good purpose, or is my commander an idiot?), is well illustrated. I don't know if I will bother with the rest of the series, but I thought this book was worth the read. Having been at Manassas/Bull Run, I also found the first book of this series interesting.
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Copperhead
Copperhead by Bernard Cornwell (Audio Cassette - December 12, 2000)
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