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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the Best Books You Will Read This Year,
By
This review is from: Glory in the Name: A Novel of the Confederate Navy (Hardcover)
"Ironclads at sea, armies moving by rail, communicating by telegraph. Rifled cannons, rifled rifles, exploding ordinance." They were all Americans, like it or not, all children of that particular genius that was America. How apt then that in less than a year of war, Americans fighting Americans, they should forever alter forever the very nature of warfare."That paragraph, found late in this marvelous book, truly frames the story that plays out between it's covers. It comes from a perspective that many of us find at least different and sometimes uncomfortable. It is a story of the Confederate Navy and is told with sympathy and understanding as well as painstaking historical attention to fact. Samual Bowater, a former officer in the United States Navy has resigned his commission to return to his home, the Confederacy and seeks to help in the only way he knows how, by seeking to serve as a naval officer. He watches from a distance and paints the scene as Fort Sumter is fired on and the Civil War begins. Robey Paine, a man of Mississippi with three sons to send to fight for the Confederacy believes that all of them have been lost in battle. A certian madness is the result, which will find him commissioning the conversion of a ship to an ironclad and leads him to the discovery that one of his som's has survived. This is a moving story of a small part of the Civil War which shows it's horror and it's passion in way that is compelling. Although I live in Maine, as does the author - about 25 miles from me - I was unaware of his writing until this book was recommended to my wife by an insightful bookstore clerk as a Christmas present for me. It is, I believe, the best book I have read in quite some time and it has already started me ordering other books written by James Nelson and looking forward to his next effort. I would give it ten stars if I could.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Civil War Fiction,
By Mike Stimers (Bellingham) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Glory in the Name: A Novel of the Confederate Navy (Hardcover)
I've been a big Civil War buff for years, and usually I am wary of fiction, but Glory in the Name is my kind of Civil War fiction! The book is very well researched and historically accurate - historical mistakes put me right off a book, but I didn't find them here. Best of all, the action is fast and unrelenting,and the characters, especially Hironymous Taylor, pull you right in. I agree with what Bernard Cornwell wrote - the best Civil War noel I have read!
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Never disappointed with Nelson!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Glory in the Name: A Novel of the Confederate Navy (Hardcover)
I couldn't wait for James L. Nelson's next book. I was even more pumped when I found out it was about the American Civil War. Nelson has given us the Revolutionary War at sea, which has been seldom written about, and also a great pirate series. Now for another nautical subject that hasn't been novelized very frequently.Don't miss this one! It is a fabulous adventure. Being from the "North" I was a little sorry that the protaganoist was a Confederate, but Nelson is nothing if not even handed. He gives credit where credit is due and realizes that there was honor and glory as well as shame and stupidity on both sides. It is that element that makes his books both more complex and more enjoyable than your standard nautical adventure. What also sets Nelson apart from so many historical novelists in general is a terrific sense of humor. There is blood and thunder galore, here, but also some laugh out loud moments. His characters live and breathe, and they themselves laugh as well as curse the horror and folly of war. And the main character Bowater gets into terrific situations only to think his way out of them in splendid fashion. Nelson just gets better and better, and he started out near the top of the nautical heap, to be sure. It is such a pleasure to have a contemporary author that one can follow and whose books one can look forward to.
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