Copperhead (Starbuck Chronicles)
Copperhead (Starbuck Chronicles) book cover

Copperhead (Starbuck Chronicles)

Hardcover – Box set, January 1, 1994

Price
$15.89
Format
Hardcover
Pages
375
Publisher
HarperCollins
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0060177669
Dimensions
6.5 x 1.25 x 9.5 inches
Weight
1.55 pounds

Description

From Publishers Weekly In the second volume of the Starbuck Chronicles, Cornwell surpasses his wonderful series featuring a war-crazed 19th-century British officer ( Sharpe's Devil , etc.) and even mainstream thrillers like Crackdown . Many believable, three-dimensional characters, including such historical figures as Jefferson Davis and George McClellan, walk, run, gallop and sometimes stumble through the Union's 1862 campaign to capture Richmond. Captain Nate Starbuck, who escaped from a fire-and-brimstone Boston preacher of a father to fight for the Confederacy in Rebel (which will be simultaneously released in paperback), here finds himself mistakenly jailed as a Yankee spy. Freed and sent across the lines as a double agent, he eventually returns to an uncertain future with the Confederates. Although it features more non-battle machinations--mostly tangled family relationships--than the Sharpe series, this novel also captures the "sheer joy" of war: Starbuck is "a soldier born to the dark trade." Cornwell masterfully depicts battle scenes and the dithering torpor of McClellan's campaign, but he also vividly portrays America's 19th-century religious fervor and Jefferson Davis's inaugural. Richard Sharpe's middle-aged son appears, as does a splendid villain aptly named de'Ath. This is a rollicking treat for Cornwell's many fans. $75,000 ad/promo. Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc. From Booklist In the sequel to Rebel: The Starbuck Chronicles, Volume 1 (HarperCollins, 1993), Cornwell seeks to create a new hero as popular as his Richard Sharpe (from the author's Napoleonic series). Nathaniel Starbuck is a Northerner, the son of a Boston minister who becomes caught up in the South at the start of the Civil War and joins the Rebel cause, captivated more by the challenge and peril of war than the righteousness of either side. New-forged loyalties entice him to stay with the rebels even after his life and his family ties are put at risk when he must act as a spy to save his best friend from charges of espionage. Nate is a beguiling hero and Cornwell's balance of battle, romance, and historic scenes are neatly paced in this novel set against the 1862 battle for Richmond. Denise Perry Donavin

Features & Highlights

  • Accused of espionage and brutally interrogated, Nate Starbuck must find out who the real spy is, a job that requires a dangerous round-trip through Union lines in the heat of battle. 30,000 first printing. $30,000 ad/promo.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(630)
★★★★
25%
(525)
★★★
15%
(315)
★★
7%
(147)
23%
(483)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Nice read

Great book!
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Thank you Beverly Hanlon

Thank you Beverly Hanlon
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An excellent Civil War Book

An excellent Civil War Book. Author Bernard Cornwell has added a new writing style different from many of his past book series.
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Well Done...

Excellent read! I thoroughly enjoyed Cornwell's mastery of combining historical facts with his own fiction to create a story that makes it hard to put this book down.
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Good historical adventure

Bernard Cornwell is highly skilled at the historical novel, whatever the era. Here we are treated to a Yankee serving in the Confederate forces while his brother serves the Union cause.

A few wrong words here and there and the story would simply fall apart; it is that close to being unbelievable. But Cornwell is skilled and always retains control of his material, so he succeeds at weaving his tale of battle, treason, cowardice and heroism, all based (loosely) on actual events with the occasional fictional, but believable, character thrown in for color.

The details of the story don't really matter. Cornwell could tell any story well and keep the reader involved as he does here.

Jerry