Vous voulez voir cette page en français ? Cliquez ici.


or
Sign in to turn on 1-Click ordering.
More Buying Choices
Have one to sell? Sell yours here
Devil's Dream: A Novel About Nathan Bedford Forrest
 
 

Devil's Dream: A Novel About Nathan Bedford Forrest [Hardcover]

Madison Smartt Bell

List Price: CDN$ 33.00
Price: CDN$ 24.31 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 25. Details
You Save: CDN$ 8.69 (26%)
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
In Stock.
Ships from and sold by Amazon.ca. Gift-wrap available.
Only 1 left in stock--order soon (more on the way).
Want it delivered Monday, February 13? Choose One-Day Shipping at checkout.

Formats

Amazon Price New from Used from
Hardcover CDN $24.31  
Paperback CDN $14.51  

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Pantheon; 1 edition (Nov 3 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0375424881
  • ISBN-13: 978-0375424885
  • Product Dimensions: 16 x 3.2 x 24.4 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 635 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #578,375 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

Praise for Madison Smartt Bell

Devil's Dream

"Brave, accomplished and utterly compelling, seamed with passages of haunting, lyrical beauty." –Kirkus

“From this retrospective view, hardscrabble Forrest emerges as a cog in a larger machine, a creature of a world he didn’t make, though complicit, to be sure, in its moral failures. North and South, ‘they’re in it right up to the neck with the rest of us,’ Forrest insists, speaking of slavery. ‘Make yore own self free,’ he tells his black son. But Madison Smartt Bell knows that such advice makes little sense to anyone wearing leg irons, that slavery didn’t end without unthinkable violence. And so, unlike Forrest, he whistles his devil’s dream to a different, more gripping, far more human tune.” –New York Times Book Review
 
“The "stuff" of which historical fiction is made, Forrest has found his novelist in Madison Smartt Bell. Born and raised in Nashville, Bell knows the sights, smells, sins and syntax of the Civil War South. His narrative, moving on and then off the battlefield, back and forth in time, is lush and lively, taut and tense.” –Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

“Sparkling with jeweled descriptive moments, this volume absorbs Forrest and those around him into the crossroads of a violent, dangerous moment where history seems to compress, the dead awaken, and conflicts slip into a time zone that defies chronology.” –Baltimore City Paper

"Exciting and authentic, Bell’s novel of a world in violent transition is flush with action and ravishing evocations of forests and fields, heat and rain, the muddy churn of hungry troops, and fleeting moments of respite as tragedy is leavened with sensuality and mystery. Will Bell’s Bedford, who so perfectly embodies the cruel paradoxes of race and war, ride again?" –Booklist, starred review

“Sparkling with jeweled descriptive moments, this volume absorbs Forrest and those around him into the crossroads of a violent, dangerous moment where history seems to compress, the dead awaken, and conflicts slip into a time zone that defies chronology.” –Baltimore City Paper

"The unconventional structure and supernatural twist expand the narrative into an engaging examination of what it means to be free, a question that haunts Forrest through his life." –Publishers Weekly

 "Many of Bell's dreamlike images have the effect of ripples across water from a skipped stone—quick and close in the beginning, they slow, then disappear back into the smooth-as-glass water." –Nashville Scene

"Rich descriptions of battles, accounts of the lives of the men who fought alongside Forrest, and the pure force of Forrest's personality make this an engrossing read." –Library Journal

“One of the most compelling figures of American military history and a damn colorful creation to boot.” –Miami Sun Post
 
“Anyone interested in looking at human inter-dependencies and disparities of the times should read the somber but telling pages of ‘Devil's Dream.’” –Jackson Free Press



All Souls' Rising
"As powerful as a hurricane . . . All Souls' Rising is really about us, our times, our prejudices, our race wars."
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

"Rich and ambitious . . . One of the most sophisticated fictional treatments of the enduring themes of class, color, and freedom."
San Francisco Chronicle

Master of the Crossroads
"Fiction in the grandest, most ambitious form . . . Often the prose swaggers muscularly, reminiscent of Cormac McCarthy in The Border Trilogy; at other times it grows florid and surreal, in the vein of Gabriel García Marquez."
The Boston Globe

"A brilliant performance, the work of an accomplished novelist of peculiar energy and courage . . . One puts down Master of the Crossroads with a visceral knowledge of what it felt like to wage war in Haiti at the turn of the nineteenth century."
The New York Times Book Review

The Stone That the Builder Refused
"A towering work . . . Bell has emerged as one of the most brilliant, artistic, and daring historical novelists of our time . . . He has created that rarest of works, a masterpiece.:
The Washington Post Book World

"Must be considered among the most important accomplishments of our century. Could easily cement Bell's reputation as one of his generation's greatest authors."
Harold Bloom
 
 
 

Product Description

From the author of All Souls’ Rising which The Washington Post called “A serious historical novel that reads like a dream,” comes a powerful new novel about Nathan Bedford Forrest, the most reviled, celebrated, and legendary, of Civil War generals.

With the same eloquence, dramatic energy, and grasp of history that marked his previous works, Madison Smartt Bell gives us a wholly new vantage point from which to view this complicated American figure. Considered a rogue by the upper ranks of the Confederate Army, who did not properly use his talents, Forrest was often relegated to small-scale operations.

In Devil's Dream, Bell brings to life an energetic, plainspoken man who does not tolerate weakness in himself or in those around him. We see Forrest on and off the battlefield, in less familiar but no less revealing moments of his life: courting the woman who would become his wife; battling a compulsion to gamble; overcoming his abhorrence of the army bureaucracy to rise to its highest ranks. We see him treating his slaves humanely even as he fights to ensure their continued enslavement, and in battle we see his knack for keeping his enemy unsettled, his instinct for the unexpected, and his relentless stamina.

As Devil's Dream moves back and forth in time, providing prismatic glimpses of Forrest, a vivid portrait comes into focus: a rough, fierce man with a life fill of contradictions.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
Browse and search another edition of this book.
Browse Sample Pages
Front Cover | Copyright | Excerpt
Search inside this book:

Tag this product

 (What's this?)
Think of a tag as a keyword or label you consider is strongly related to this product.
Tags will help all customers organize and find favorite items.
Your tags: Add your first tag
 

Customer Reviews

There are no customer reviews yet on Amazon Canada
5 star:    (0)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
Share your experience with this product with others
Create your own review
Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 3.9 out of 5 stars (14 customer reviews)

10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Some Men (and Women) Are Born Warriors, Dec 6 2009
By Jim Duggins, Ph.D. "Author, The Power and Sla... - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Devil's Dream: A Novel About Nathan Bedford Forrest (Hardcover)
"Devil's Dream" by Madison Smartt Bell is many things -- a book one can't put down; a fascinating story of American history and valiant warriors; and, finally, a book one wants never to end. This writer feels privileged to have discovered a perfect example of the novelist's craft. That is not to say it's an easy book -- it is, after all, a story of America's bloodiest war, and the protagonist, Nathan Bedford Forrest, is nothing if not a warior.

Forrest, a Confederate cavalry officer during the Civil War, his family, friends, and cavalry cohorts form the nucleus of this story of a man who may well be the most fearless and single-minded person who ever lived. Author Bell's character development in "Devil's Dream" is breathtaking for the scope and depth of his presentation. In the course of the book, we meet his wife, children, slaves, friends, and, yes, his mistress, each one of whom is well-developed and who further informs us about Forrest's persona. Best of all, we come to see Black and White people, slave and free, in many roles during what must have been the most tense time of race relations in American history. Of particular interest, too, are the attitudes of southerners on the ground, many of whom cohabit with family members who are Union sympathizers.

Author Bell's macrocosmic knowledge of American history and microcosmic details of Civil War battles is awesome. And, most important, none of this information is "told" to us lecture-like -- it's all "shown" -- and you feel yourself seated behind Forrest on his horse as he plunges into the thick of a half-dozen battles. One is astounded by the number of knife cuts and bullets the man survived as well as the number he administered to others. You'll lose count of the number of horses shot out from under him, but you'll never forget the two horses whose wounds he plugged with a finger in order to keep the nag galloping on in the battle to kill more Yankees.

Bell's deft use of language is at once descriptive but also breathtaking for its creativity -- a single word, a touch that arrests your attention, holds it captive, e.g., "Somewhere behind them the second cannon coughed," "and the pair of them were silhouetted in silver by the mist," "Day should have broken, but fog smothered the sun." And you'll find moments of surprising beauty in small details, e.g, following a battle where blood colored the Mississippi River and in the following morning when the fog lifts and there is the smell of death and gunpowder -- a white owl settles in a tree now leafless and "it preened its yellowish feathers and shrugged."

"Devil's Dream" by Madison Smartt Bell is more than a book to recommend, it's a MUST READ to add to your collection.

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Fighter in War and Peace, Nov 24 2010
By Roger Brunyate "reader/writer/musician" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Devil's Dream (Paperback)
This is a terrific novel about a real figure: Nathan Bedford Forrest, who became one of the most respected Confederate generals in the Civil War. A slave-owner himself, he offers to free any slaves who will join him in fighting for the right to retain the institution. We see him in a rage, breaking a pot over the head of an insubordinate slave, then the next moment going to considerable expense to seek out and buy back the man's wife, who had been sold away from him. This only one of the contradictions that make Forrest so fascinating. Of minimal education himself, he nonetheless manages to win the heart of Mary Ann Montgomery, the genteel product of a finishing school, who tempers his roughness with grace, understanding, and a firm touch. Although still obviously in love with his wife, Bedford finds a different kind of passion with a slave woman, Catharine, with whom he will have several children. Two of his sons, one legitimate and the other not, will fight with him in the war, and the rivalry between them and their mixed pride and envy of their father forms one of the minor strands in this absorbing and exciting book.

I should say that I am no Civil War buff, and have read very few other books about the conflict. This one is good, not because it casts light on events that I already know, but because it leads me into a world I hardly knew at all. I can think of only other one novel that comes so close to making me feel the detail and texture of the war, Michael Shaara's magnificent THE KILLER ANGELS, his novelization of Gettysburg. But while Shaara takes the panoptic view, giving equal time to generals and soldiers on both sides, Bell filters everything through the eyes of Forrest and those closest to him. While Shaara focuses on a single set-piece battle, Bell deals as much with skirmishes, raids, and surprise attacks, a kind of fighting in woods and mountains that seems closer to guerilla tactics than the maneuvers of large armies. And while Shaara covers the action of only a few days, Bell ranges freely over a period of two decades, from 1845 to 1865.

Perhaps Bell's most significant decision was not to tell the book chronologically. His forty shortish chapters jump around between the prewar period, the war itself, and the immediate aftermath. Each centers around a specific anecdote, giving the book a series of immediate paybacks on the way to a powerful cumulative effect. I'm not sure I always understood the reason for the specific ordering of specific chapters, but the result is to give the book a psychological rather than historical unity. The connecting thread is the surprising mind of Nathan Bedford Forrest himself, with all his built-in contradictions. Bell also introduces -- indeed opens with -- a kind of chorus character, a free black from Haiti by way of New Orleans, whose name, Henri, is transformed into "Ornery" by the soldiers. Henri has the gift of second sight, able to foresee people's deaths, and in some of the more visionary scenes he is actually dead himself. Oddly enough, this fantastic aspect enhances the immediacy of the rest. It threads through the book like the "Devil's Dream" of the title, a fiddle tune that starts slow and works up faster and faster.

The Devil, of course, is Forrest, which was how Sherman described him to Lincoln; his Dream has evaporated by the war's end, although nothing dims the man's fighting spirit. There are plenty of episodes which can account for Forrest's reviled reputation, not least a massacre of black and white soldiers at Fort Pillow, but Bell presents his protagonist with sympathy and understanding. What he gives us is a flawed but honest individual of irresistible personal magnetism, a rough-tongued leader who is impossible for soldiers not to follow or readers not to admire: "Git round the left," he shouted at the remnants of the Seventh. "Take the damnjobberknowlyankees in the rear there. Git on with ye -- if ye're feart to be shot ye best go forward for I'm well and goddam ready to shoot ye in the back if ye don't."

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Ambivalence nags at me, Jan 14 2010
By Robert C. Olson - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Devil's Dream: A Novel About Nathan Bedford Forrest (Hardcover)
Ambivalence nags at me
I both liked and grew a bit bored with Madison Smartt Bell's interesting Devil's Dream. Historical fiction about Civil War Confederate Cavalry General Nathan Bedford Forrest, Mr. Bell used an interesting literary formula to examine the more intimate elements of General Forrest's roguish life and character. Nathan Forrest was both a simple man and extremely complex. He was a first class fighter, a man of principle, yet character flawed in several ways.
The book is not an easy one to read and requires the reader to pay attention. This is where my interest flagged as I found my mind wandering at times. In several places I skimmed filler to get back to more interesting writing. I did enjoy Mr. Bell's use of colloquial English and how he related General Forrest's views concerning slavery. All in all not an easy novel to read if you do not have some prior background concerning Nathan Bedford Forrest the man and famous civil war general. I am a long time civil war buff and General Forrest is one of my favorite civil war characters who I have read extensively about. Fairly accurate historically but do not expect to read much in the way of actual battles or personal combat. Some, but that is NOT the main thrust of this novel. Also, the non-sequential literary style of the writer can confuse the reader.
Not the best Civil War historical fiction I have read yet still interesting.
Hard to recommend as a hardback. If you are interested get it from your local library or wait for the paperback. Worth the read but be warned it will demand that the reader pay attention.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 14 reviews  3.9 out of 5 stars 

Listmania!

Create a Listmania! list

Look for similar items by category


Look for similar items by subject


Feedback


Amazon.ca Privacy Statement Amazon.ca Shipping Information Amazon.ca Returns & Exchanges