Product Details
|
“I am a free man,” said Britt. “Have been for years.” Hammond brightened. “Excellent! A free negro! In Texas!” Britt’s face was still. He said, “Are you?” Hammond was silent a moment. “Am I what?” “Free.” Hammond was silent for a moment. Then he gave Britt a quick nod. “An excellent question. One worthy of pondering.” “Yes, sir.”This dialogue serves to make a socio-political point, but as an illustration of Britt’s character, it’s rather thin. Britt’s presence in the novel is further diminished by several storylines vying for the reader’s attention, most obviously Samuel Hammond’s. Jiles gives Hammond’s character (that of a staunch Christian proponent of non-violence) and his predicament (he has been sent in to govern a lawless, warring people) almost the same attention as Britt’s. Soon after the novel opens, Jiles spends 20 pages describing Hammond’s background in Philadelphia. From there, entire chapters are devoted to life in the Indian Agency and Hammond’s religious dilemma. Meanwhile, other secondary characters come and go without explanation. One example is James Deaver, an adventurer-illustrator with the New York Herald. Deaver meets Hammond on the train to Texas and subsequently reappears a few times solely to warn Hammond of what readers already know – that he’s in over his head. Taken as a whole, The Colour of Lightning more closely resembles a survey of north Texas’s socio-political climate in the mid- to late-1800s than a story of a heroic everyman. After slowly progressing through the last third of the novel, the bullet-riddled conclusion fails to stir the intended emotion. Instead of feeling that they’ve undergone a powerful fictional experience, readers may close the book with only the distinct impression that they have learned something.
Tags Customers Associate with This Product(What's this?)Click on a tag to find related items, discussions, and people.
|
|
Share your thoughts with other customers:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Most helpful customer reviews
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
TO READ THIS IS BOTH PRIVILEGE AND PLEASURE,
By
This review is from: The Color Of Lightning: A Novel (Hardcover)
To read the work of Paulette Jiles is both a privilege and a pleasure. Reviewing her debut novel, Enemy Women, I described her prose as artful, her story painful in its authenticity yet poetically rendered, and the book as one that would not be forgotten. I would echo those sentiments regarding The Color Of Lightning. An acclaimed poet and memorist, her literary voice haunts as she explores the plight of humanity in its progress.Once again she turns to pages from our history to bring us an imagined story, yet one based on prodigious research, documentation, and oral history. Set in post-Civil War North Texas it is the morning of October 13, 1864 when Britt Johnson, a freed-man, is preparing his team of horses to go to Weatherford for supplies. He leaves behind his wife, Mary, and their two youngest children. Stopping along the way he leaves his eldest son, Jim, at the Fitzgerald home for a visit. While Britt is away "...a combined force of seven hundred Comanche and Kiowa poured down into what the white people knew as Young County. Mary and the children are captured by the Kiowa, while Elizabeth Fitzgerald and her granddaughter are seized by the Comanches. They were, it seemed at the time, more fortunate than Susan Durgan whose "scalp and its tangled brown hair bounced on the pommel of a man named Eaten Alive." Thus, Britt's odyssey begins, a search for his family across unfriendly, unfamiliar terrain often in enemy territory. In a parallel story Samuel Hammond, a Philadelphia Quaker, is delegated by the Society of Friends to go West as the Indian agent, to befriend and teach the Comanche and Kiowa, to give them goods, calico, muslin, rations of beef, farming implements, as if these "would bring order and obedience." And then they would be happy to live on a reservation. It is also his task to rescue those taken captive and return them to their families, little knowing that some seized as children have no wish to return, in fact fear what they do not remember or understand. Later, a young girl called Good Medicine is brought to him. When he reassures her that now she will not go hungry, he realizes it is not starvation she fears but "She was afraid of the slow death of confinement. Of being trapped inside immovable houses and stiff clothing.....She could not go out at dawn alone and sing, she would not be seen and known by the rising sun." There is a great deal of beauty in Jiles's book and large portions of truth. Questions that today remain unanswered. Highly recommended. - Gail Cooke
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Wonderful novel of the southwest,
By
This review is from: The Color Of Lightning Canadian (Paperback)
I'm a fairly fickle reader. It's not unusual for me to buy several books at once and not finish any of them. Not so with The Color of Lightning. I was hooked from the first page. Ms.Jiles's descriptions of characters and the landscape of northern Texas during the late 1860's are so vivid that they left me searching for spare time to continue reading. Britton Johnson's wife and children are captured by Kiowa's and Comanche's during a raid on his homestead. Johnson sets off in search of his family amid the dangers of life on the Texas frontier. Intertwined with Johnson's story is that of Samuel Hammond, a Quaker, sent out to oversee a newly established Indian agency on the Texas-Oklahoma border. Based on actual events, The Color of Lightning captures the era in a unique way thanks to Ms.Jiles extraordinary ability with language. A must read and my vote for one of the best books of the year!
4.0 out of 5 stars
A gripping, thought-provoking book,
By
This review is from: The Color Of Lightning Canadian (Paperback)
Reason for Reading: I love historical fiction that takes place in the late 1800's Wild West. The Black man/Indian perspective was also intriguing.This is the story of Britt Johnson, a true-life black man, and the story of his life just after the Civil War. Britt was a freedman with a wife and 3 three children. Not much is known of him in hard facts, though his story has lived on in oral tradition throughout the ages. When he was off with the other men of his homestead area getting supplies in town, the Comanche and Kiowa came in a raided their homesteads. Killing, raping and taking captives. Britt's wife was raped and suffered a major head wound, his eldest son was killed, while his wife and two younger children were taken captive along with a neighbouring white woman and her two little granddaughters. We see this story from Britt's side, from Mary's side, from the children's side, and from various Indian character's sides as well. There is also introduced a Quaker man who becomes the agent of Indian Affairs for these two violent Native groups and he wrestles strongly with his peaceful Quaker ways and the violent kidnapping of children & women by the Indians as he becomes the only man with enough power to help those being violated but he must go against his religious philosophies to do so and yet his moral self will not allow him to not help stop the atrocities. A fine book that brings deep perspective to a dark period of American history. Indians are being sent off their land and made to live on reservations to learn to farm when it is not their way, but in return their way is raiding and war, scalping, raping, enslaving others. Many wrestle with the morality of it all. Britt is a hero on the white man's side as he risks his life to find Indian captives and bring them back home to their own culture, but what to do with the ones taken as babies who know no other way of life. It is wrong that they have been stolen and yet they do not want to leave what they consider there homes. While Britt is a respected man for what he does, he's never allowed to forget the colour of his own skin as he enters city centres and must use back doors or cannot even enter certain establishments at all. A gripping, thought-provoking book peopled with real life figures from history.
Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
Want to see more reviews on this item?
|
|
|