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Copperhead

Ball's Bluff, 1862

#2 in series

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The beloved Confederate Captain Nate Starbuck returns to the front lines of the Civil War in this second installment of Bernard Cornwell's acclaimed Nathaniel Starbuck Chronicles.

It is the summer of 1862 and the northern army is threatening to capture Richmond, the Confederate capital. Captain Nathaniel Starbuck, born in Boston but a Confederate hero at Manassas, is again in the thick of Civil War action. Bloodied but victorious at the battles of Ball's Bluff and Seven Pines, Nate suddenly finds himself accused of being a Yankee spy. Proving his innocence and finding the real spy will require courage and endurance rarely seen even in the brutal fog of war. Failure could mean the fall of Richmond and a career-ending defeat for Robert E. Lee.

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  • Reviews

    • AudioFile Magazine
      The second installment of Cornwell's Starbuck Chronicles has protagonists switching sides in the Civil War. Nate Starbuck, son of one of New England's prominent abolitionists, befriends a scion of Virginian artistocracy, Adam Faulconer, at Yale. Adam's patriotism and love of country ultimately force him to fight alongside Northerners while, Nate, escaping from a tyrannical father and enamoured with the South, finds his spritiual home in a Rebel regiment. But being from the North, Nate is thought to be a spy. Tom Parker rises gallantly to the challenges of Cornwell's complicated plot. The character of Starbuck conveys the sincerity that makes him an appealing character, and the many other principals in the story are easy to distinguish through their Southern, Scots, and Irish characterizations. One wishes only that Parker's pauses to indicate time shifts were a tad longer. M.D.H. (c) AudioFile 2002, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 3, 1994
      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.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      This is the second in a series of fascinating novels focused on the early battles of the Civil War. Reader Hayward Morse gets high marks for effort. His strength is in the real-life expressiveness found in the dialogue passages. However, some vocal characterizations are right on target while others are much less effective. In addition, there are some incorrect geographical pronunciations ("Po-tow-mack" and "Merry-land"), which are probably the result of the production's British origins. But on balance this is an enjoyable and educational effort. T.J.M. (c) AudioFile, Portland, Maine
    • AudioFile Magazine
      Nate Starbuck has left his upright Boston family and joined the Confederate cause in the Civil War. A talented soldier, he's entered the world of espionage, betraying his brother's trust in the bargain. Ed Sala offers a no-nonsense, no-frills performance of this historically correct fiction. His gritty, unemotional portrayal of the horrors of war blends perfectly with his characterizations of Northern and Southern soldiers, whores and preachers. While each carries enough distinction in tone to easily identify, none is exaggerated or enlivened. Sala tells the story well, without overperforming. R.P.L. (c) AudioFile 2000, Portland, Maine

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Text Difficulty:10-12

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