By: Barbara Hambly
Genres: Historical | Fiction
Posted: August 11, 2009
Susanna Ashford lives on Bayberry Run Plantation in eastern Tennessee with her father, brothers and sister who are all avowed confederates. Cora Poole married a close friend of one of Susanna's brothers, and to keep matters interesting, Susanna is in love with Cora's father-in-law. While Susanna has had slaves all her life, she isn't sure secession is the best thing, and Cora starts out with her husband Emory in Boston, but moves to Deer Isle in Maine to live with her family when Emory goes to war.
But Emory doesn't walk down the street and sign up. He goes south to fight with his childhood friends for his homeland. Cora is branded a "copperhead" and told she should divorce her husband as a traitor. Susanna and Cora are strong, intelligent and opinionated women who share all with each other. It seems many times they have no one else in which to confide. The letters cover everything from the everyday life of sugaring and preserving to going visiting to gossip to literature. They tell stories as the quick e-mails we dash off to friends and colleagues can't possibly do. It might seem that writing letters would be easier than maintaining a narrative, but I think it's harder as entire lives and experiences must be conveyed in correspondence.
Hambly, well-known for her fantasy tales and a historical series about a free man of color in New Orleans, has put a new twist on the historical novel in HOMELAND, but creates no less compelling a tale. It felt not so much like reading a novel, but sitting in my grandmother's attic, reading letters she had saved from her mother's mother. Susanna and Cora draw the reader into their lives, sharing experiences, emotions and hardships. The novel has much food for thought to impart, as well: when does a true friend tell the truth and when is it withheld? The letters don't shy away from details of the hard labors of daily life, having a militia in one's house, watching a loved one fade in front of one's eyes or the siege at Vicksburg. Barbara Hambly manages to make each genre her own, and this novel is no exception. Fans of historical novels, women's fiction and mainstream stories will enjoy this novel.
Book Summary
Those who loved Cold Mountain or Geraldine Brooks’s
March will embrace and long remember this
spellbinding novel of two remarkable women torn apart by
conflict, sustained by literature and art, united by
friendship and hope.
As brother turns
against brother in the bloodbath of the Civil War, two
young women sacrifice everything but their friendship.
Susanna Ashford is the Southerner, living on a plantation
surrounded by scarred and blood-soaked battlefields. Cora
Poole is the Northerner, on an isolated Maine island, her
beloved husband fighting for the Confederacy. Through the
letters the two women exchange, they speak of the ordeal
of a familiar world torn apart by tragedy. And yet their
unique friendship will help mend the fabric of a ravaged
nation.
The two women write about books and art,
about loss and longing, about their future and the future
of their country. About love. About being a woman in
nineteenth-century America. About the triumphant
resilience of the human spirit.
Their voices and
their stories are delineated in indomitable prose by an
award-winning writer who captures in intimate detail a
singular moment in time. In Homeland,
Barbara Hambly takes readers on a unique odyssey across a
landscape treacherous with hardship and hatred. She paints
a passionate masterpiece of a friendship that not only
transforms our understanding of the most heart-wrenching
era of American history but celebrates the power of women
to change their world.
by: Barbara Hambly
Bantam
September 1, 2009
On Sale: August 25, 2009
Featuring:
336 pages
ISBN: 0553805525
EAN: 9780553805529
Hardcover