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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An Authentic Southern Voice - Good Fiction, Good History,
By
This review is from: Nashville 1864 -The Dying of the Light: A Novel (Hardcover)
I am sometimes disappointed with fictional accounts of the U.S. Civil War, perhaps because the historical accounts are so remarkable in themselves that they seldom benefit from fictional license. There are indeed exceptions, splendid novels like The Red Badge of Courage, Andersonville, The Killer Angels, and the subject of this review, Nashville 1864 - The Dying of the Light, by Madison Jones.In this fascinating short novel Confederates forces are continuing to fight against overwhelming odds, with little hope of victory. Nashville has been occupied by Northern soldiers since February, 1862. In a desperate attempt, General Hood's shattered forces, severely crippled shortly before in the disastrous battle at Franklin, Tennessee, are now engaging the Union Army in what is today called the Battle of Nashville, December 15 and 16, 1864. Madison Jones portrays this battle and its immediate aftermath from the perspective of a young boy, Steven Moore, as he searches for his father among the wounded Confederate soldiers. The story is presented as a memoir written by the adult Steven Moore many years after the actual event, but nonetheless filled with detail and emotion that remained deeply etched in his memory. Steven Moore had not forgiven the North for its severe, mean-spirited occupation of Nashville, especially the period under General Rosecrans. This short novel, Nashville 1864 - The Dying of the Light, is good, powerful fiction, and it is also good history.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Civil War from a Young Boy's Perspective,
By gac1003 "gac1003" (Long Beach, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Nashville 1864: The Dying of the Light (Paperback)
At the outbreak of the Civil War, 12-year-old Steven Moore watches on as his father Jason saddles up his horse to join other Confederates in the fight to protect Tennessee. After many months of hardship, Steven's youngest sister, Liza, becomes so gravely ill that he decides to find his father and to bring him home. With his mother's approval and a crude map, he and his companion, a young slave named Dink, set off into the heart of the battle to find his father.This is one of the most compelling novels of the Civil War, told from the perspective of a 12-year-old boy. Through his eyes, we see the area surrounding Nashville change from healthy farmland to desolate battle fields. The Confederate soldiers whom he knew to be proud and strong turn out to be haunted men with sallow faces, bare feet and rags for clothing. He and Dink watch some of the fighting firsthand: the booming of the canons, the black troops fighting for the Union, the dead and the dying everywhere. And, still he continues to search for his father, diving deeper and deeper into the heart of the battle. With fantastically detailed imagery and strongly developed characters, Madison Jones has created a Civil War novel that appeals to all readers, both young and old. You have a real sense of what the war must have been like for a young boy, witnessing his family life upturned and almost destroyed. Nothing is romanticized. A strong novel for young adults and anyone interested in the Civil War.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A powerful miniature by a master,
By
This review is from: Nashville 1864: The Dying of the Light (Paperback)
Madison Jones is one of the unheralded masters of contemporary American fiction. He has written powerful, compelling stories dealing with such explosive issues as racism (in his masterpiece A CRY OF ABSENCE), drugs, family conflict, and sex (AN EXILE, turned into the Gregory Peck film I WALK THE LINE).In the present volume Jones turns his attention to the waning days of the War Between the States, in which a young boy, with his black companion, goes searching for his father. This is not sugar-coated stuff. Jones casts an unflincing eye on the events, related in memoir form by the adult Steven, and the descriptions of war and its carnage are often graphic (but never exploitively so)in the manner, say, of Spielberg's SAVING PRIVATE RYAN. Jones never loses his moral focus, however. This is a story of love and courage, faithfulness and innocence, determination and loyalty. A short work but memorable nonetheless, by a novelist long overdue greater and wider attention.
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