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Cut to the Heart: Clara Barton and the Darkness of Love and War
 
 

Cut to the Heart: Clara Barton and the Darkness of Love and War (Hardcover)

by Ava Dianne Day (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

In this atmospheric thriller set in 1863 amid the Gullah communities off the South Carolina coast, the author of the delightful Fremont Jones mysteries (The Strange Files of Fremont Jones; Fire and Fog; etc.) has real-life Union nurse Clara Barton, founder of the American Red Cross, playing detective as well as ministering to the sick and wounded. Day has a wonderful ability to evoke the past, here the world of Hilton Head Island with its eerie swamps and Gullah people with their distinctive folk medicine and customs. As the fight for Charleston heats up, Clara is working with the local poor until she again receives the call to go to the battlefield. As ever, she is beset by male, military and doctoral prejudice. In addition, her brother, David, a Union officer, is on hand trying to make a wife and mother of her, totally unable to understand the life of dedication to others that she's chosen to lead. And, unbeknownst to Clara, a sinister surgeon, the demented Dr. Chamberlain, is tracking her every move and awaiting his chance to avenge himself on her for reasons that even he's unclear about. Day tastefully and effectively handles Clara's romantic interest in another real-life figure, Colonel John Elwell, who joins the suicidal assault on the rebel redoubt, Battery Wagner. Although this obvious labor of love doesn't contain much mystery or suspense, Day's fans should relish it, along with readers who appreciate well-researched historical novels.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


From Library Journal

Clara Barton as sleuth? The author, a mystery writer whose day job used to be in hospital administration, builds a suspenseful tale trading on the little-known fact that after the Civil War Barton was charged with accounting for 22,000 missing soldiers.
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3.0 out of 5 stars Sentimental and repetitive, Oct 17 2002
By Barbara L. Pinzka "Book Friend" (Cincinnati, Ohio USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
It's 1963 and Clara Barton, "The Angel of the Battlefield," is in Hilton Head, SC, awaiting the Union forces' attack on Charleston. She prepares her supplies, falls in love with a married man and has an affair, and becomes a sleuth, tracking down the psychotic who has stalked her and terrorized the community.

Barton is one of my heroes, so I enjoyed seeing what Day did in her fictionalization, even if it doesn't ring true with what I already know about her. I also adore the South Sea Islands area of the U.S., and Day more than does justice to the natural beauty of the area and its people. A nice subplot has Barton helping a young black boy become literate and find a future. The horrors of our Civil War are also brought to life well.

But the book's pace is too slow, and Barton's bodice-ripping romance is a bit amateur. Any reader of the murder-mystery genre will find the stalcker entirely predictable.

Get it at the library.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Cut to the Heart--Clara Barton, Jun 10 2002
By Karen Dyer (Dublin, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
The author of the wonderful "Fremont Jones" series has made a dramatic move in writing CUT TO THE HEART and yet that same "you are there" sense of place and time that makes the Fremont Jones' series so great makes this book great also.
I admire the research, the time and the effort that went into this book and respect Ms. Day all the more for it.
Clara Barton, founder of the Red Cross, an image in my mind since childhood, is brought to vivid light and the vague ideas I had are embued with life thanks to this book.
Bravo to Ms. Day. I look forward to where she turns her pen next.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Historical novel delivers, Jun 10 2002
By Kathryn R. Wall (Hilton Head Island, SC USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
While perhaps not technically a mystery, Dianne Day's new novel about Clara Barton is a richly drawn account of one indomitable woman's determination to serve her country during one of the darkest periods in its history. Set on Hilton Head Island, SC, during the Union occupation in 1863, "Cut to the Heart" rings with the authenticity we've come to expect from Ms. Day, whose Fremont Jones novels brought turn-of-the-century San Francisco so vividly to life. She has captured the lush, steamy landscape of the Lowcountry so completely you can almost smell the dank pluff mud of the marshes and hear the constant whine of the insects.
Accurate as well is Day's portrayal of the Sea Islands' recently freed black population, abandoned and forgotten by their white masters who fled inland ahead of the victorious Union Navy assault. Untrained to survive on their own, the former slaves are suffering from malnutrition and the many diseases riding on the fetid air of the swampy marshlands.
Enter Clara Barton, self-appointed "Angel of the Battlefield" and future founder of the Red Cross. Sent to the garrison on Hilton Head to await the next battle, Clara finds herself drawn to the plight of the local people. While she struggles to understand their lyrical Gullah language and strange blend of Christianity and ancient magic, Clara defies the military medical establishment by treating them as best she can. She enlists the aid of a young black teenager named Erasmus, whose thirst for learning stirs Clara's hope for his people's future. Together they gather and stockpile the wagonloads of donated supplies which have earned her the unique battlefield pass she carries.
Drawing on meticulous research into private letters and diaries, Ms. Day provides us with a fascinating, although fictionalized, vision of this revered woman. In her liaison with Col. John Elwell, the married commandant of the Hilton Head post, we discover a Clara Barton as passionate about love as she is about her mission. Stalked by a demented doctor who is obsessed with a revolutionary medical experiment that requires an increasing number of live "specimens," Clara soon finds herself enmeshed in a bizarre chess match with a faceless nemesis who may be much closer than she thinks. As local blacks -- both adults and children -- begin disappearing, Clara Barton turns sleuth and, in the process, may have unwittingly delivered herself into the hands of her tormentor.
The mystery may be thin, but this well-written historical novel is certainly loaded with suspense as well as a stunning ending. It is well worth the reader's investment
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2.0 out of 5 stars I was very disappointed
I was very excited to read this book as I have just discovered the Fremont Jones series by the same author. Read more
Published on Jun 4 2002

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