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COPPERHEAD by Bernard Cornwell

COPPERHEAD

by Bernard Cornwell

Pub Date: Jan. 1st, 1994
ISBN: 006093462X
Publisher: HarperCollins

Cornwell's fine Civil War Starbuck Chronicles (Rebel 1993, etc.) continues into 1862—as General McClellan ineffectively engineers the prototype of Desert Storm around Williamsburg, Virginia, and young Nate gets a girl. Why is it that it takes an Englishman to write the most entertaining American military historical novels? Who knows. But it's hard to imagine a more intriguing protagonist than Nate Starbuck, Cornwell's Boston divinity student turned Confederate officer who discovered how much he liked soldiering and how good he was at it in Rebel. He's still with Faulconer's legion, still marching alongside crusty Sergeant Truslow, still visiting Truslow's delectable daughter Sally at her Richmond bordello, and still reporting to clever schoolmaster-turned-colonel "Pecker" Bird. But Nate's simple soldiering has been made much more dangerous by the capture of his Yankee brother James and the related subversion of his friend and fellow rebel officer Adam Faulconer. Adam, whose rich father loathes and distrusts Nate, has been thinking too much about the Union viewpoint and it's turned his loyalties upside down. He's begun a campaign of espionage that will, if it succeeds, hand Union General George McClellan the key to the capture of Richmond. McClellan has amassed the mightiest American army ever seen to march up the lightly defended peninsula from Yorktown to the Confederate capital. Fortunately for the rebels, the general is the epitome of caution. Unfortunately for Nate, Adam's useless treachery is blamed on him and he's imprisoned by his own side. His release comes only after weeks of torture, but it's softened by the attentions of Adam's interesting fiancee, Miss Julia Gordon. Always based on fact, always interesting, often exciting, always entertaining.