![]() ![]() He knew, above all else, that fighting this war for the Union cause was right and just. When he first enlisted, March was an idealistic man. “I never promised I would write the truth,” he admits, if only to himself. ![]() But when he sits down to write his daily missive to his beloved wife, Marmee, he does not talk of the death and destruction around him, but of clouds “emboss the sky,” his longing for home, and how he misses his four beautiful daughters. March, an army chaplain, has just survived a brush with death as his unit crossed the Potomac and experienced the small but terrible battle of Ball’s Bluff. March, Brooks has created a conflicted and deeply sensitive man, a father who is struggling to reconcile duty to his fellow man with duty to his family against the backdrop of one of the most grim periods in American history. March, the absent father from Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women. ![]() Now, Brooks turns her talents to exploring the devastation and moral complexities of the Civil War through her brilliantly imagined tale of Mr. With her critically acclaimed and bestselling novel Year of Wonders, Geraldine Brooks was praised for her passionate rendering and careful research in vividly imagining the effects of the bubonic plague on a small English village in the seventeenth century. ![]()
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