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Most helpful customer reviews
2.0 out of 5 stars
Bad Storytelling,
By TheMooseIntheRoom (California) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Gods and Generals (Mass Market Paperback)
As someone who would read almost anything related to the Civil War, I was very disappointed by this book. I read and loved The Killer Angels because that book gave such a sincere look into the lives of the generals. But Gods and General's attempt was much too heavy handed. The book is overly sentimental, and badly written. The generals all seem to be suffering from acute martyr complexes. At some point, the writer seems to have forgotten that these were real people with (at least some) pedestrian human concerns. Instead, he seems to focus on the dying and martyring part alone. The generals no longer seemed real... they were too noble, even their flaws seem more idealistic heroic than human. And their triumph and failures read more like a Greek tragedy than a novel concerned with historical accuracy.Additionally, the writer seems to have missed on that day where elementary writing classes emphasized the importance of "show not tell". There is no need to infer the meaning of his character's motivations--Jeff Shaara bashes his message through with a hammer. I think what disappointed me the most was the underlying story in there that was struggling to get out. The book covers a fascinated time populated by extraordinary people. Their actions spoke volumes for their character, there really was no need to force the issue by overtly explaining and filling their every decision with melodrama.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Astounding prequel to his father's Killer Angels,
By
This review is from: Gods and Generals (Mass Market Paperback)
My first love is Scottish History, but since I was raised on both sides of the pond, I grew to have a great love for the complexities of the War Between the States in the US. So, it was great pleasure I read this book.Shaara, in this case Jeff, the son of Michael, had a hard act to follow. His father was the author of Pulitzer Prize Winning Killer Angels (1974). Killer Angels looked at the high watermark of the Confederacy which ended with the battle of Gettysburg. That was the single most important event of the whole War Between the States, in a war that shaped the United States. It gave such insight, such reality into the horror, the glory, the humanity and inhumanity of war, of Generals Lee, Hancock, Pickett and Chamberlain. Shaara's words brought alive the battle and made you feel it all, the anticipation, the frustration, the fear and the anger. In Gods and Generals, Jeff picks up his father's pen and gives you another masterpiece. Though father and son, both have a different writing voices. Jeff picks up the threads of what happened before Gettysburg, a prequel to his father's award winning novel, giving you insight into the men facing what would be their hardest trial. He again centres on the driven Lee, the bumbling Chamberlain, the dashing Hancock, but we also see Jackson, the man who could march his men 40 miles in a day and then fight a battle, one of the most efficient Generals of the whole war on either side, yet overwhelming a religious man. What interested me most, was his portrait of Lee, his dedication to the Confederacy winning and yet the pain of being torn by his loyalty to the Union army he once served and likely of which he would have been General had he not resigned his commission. A tour de force for a first time writer.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Astounding prequel to father's Killer Angels!,
By
This review is from: Gods and Generals (Mass Market Paperback)
My first love is Scottish History, but since I was raised on both sides of the pond, I grew to have a great love for the complexities of the War Between the States in the US. So, it was great pleasure I read this book.Shaara, in this case Jeff, the son of Michael, had a hard act to follow. His father was the author of Pulitzer Prize Winning Killer Angels (1974). Killer Angels looked at the high watermark of the Confederacy which ended with the battle of Gettysburg. That was the single most important event of the whole War Between the States, in a war that shaped the United States. It gave such insight, such reality into the horror, the glory, the humanity and inhumanity of war, of Generals Lee, Hancock, Pickett and Chamberlain. Shaara's words brought alive the battle and made you feel it all, the anticipation, the frustration, the fear and the anger. In Gods and Generals, Jeff picks up his father's pen and gives you another masterpiece. Though father and son, both have a different writing voices. Jeff picks up the threads of what happened before Gettysburg, a prequel to his father's award winning novel, giving you insight into the men facing what would be their hardest trial. He again centres on the driven Lee, the bumbling Chamberlain, the dashing Hancock, but we also see Jackson, the man who could march his men 40 miles in a day and then fight a battle, one of the most efficient Generals of the whole war on either side, yet overwhelming a religious man. What interested me most, was his portrait of Lee, his dedication to the Confederacy winning and yet the pain of being torn by his loyalty to the Union army he once served and likely of which he would have been General had he not resigned his commission. A tour de force for a first time writer.
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