You are not signed in. Sign in.

List Books: Buy books on ListBooks.org

Far Bright Star »

Book cover image of Far Bright Star by Robert Olmstead

Authors: Robert Olmstead
ISBN-13: 9781565129801, ISBN-10: 1565129806
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill
Date Published: May 2010
Edition: (Non-applicable)

Find Best Prices for This Book »

Author Biography: Robert Olmstead

Robert Olmstead is the author of five previous books (River Dogs, Soft Water, A Trail of Heart’s Blood Wherever We Go, America by Land, and Stay Here with Me). The recipient of a Guggenheim fellowship and an NEA grant, he is a professor at Ohio Wesleyan University.

Book Synopsis

The year is 1916. The enemy Pancho Villa, is elusive. The terrain is unforgiving, the intense heat and dust both relentless and overpowering. Through the mountains and across the long dry stretches of Mexico, Napoleon Childs, an aging cavalryman, leads an expedition of inexperienced horse soldiers on seemingly fruitless searches.

Napoleon has weathered the storms of battle with a toughness that has become like a second skin, with the Rattler, a horse who’s as flinty and seasoned as he. But this time, Napoleon can’t control one of his young soldiers who has a penchant for reckless, dramatic actions—and who singlehandedly, in his desire to prove himself, makes a move that is the beginning of the end. Before long, Napoleon’s patrol is at the mercy of an enemy who is intent not only on killing Napoleon’s men but on something much bigger: avenging a brutal act.

Robert Olmstead describes the experience of battle so viscerally that the reader feels the fear, the danger, and the dread. With the precision of a master, he tells the harrowing and transfixing story of the last of these intrepid warriors.

Publishers Weekly

In his seventh novel, Olmstead (Coal Black Horse) delivers another richly characterized, tightly woven story of nature, inevitability and the human condition. In 1916, the aging Napoleon Childs assembles a cavalry to search for the elusive bandit Pancho Villa in Mexico. The ragtag group includes Napoleon's brother, Xenophon, and "America's eager export of losers, deadbeats, cutthroats, dilettantes, and murderers." Riding on horseback for months at a time, Napoleon finds himself and his men always just a few hours behind Villa, whose posse navigates the unforgiving terrain with ease. When a band of marauders descend upon the group, many of Napoleon's men are brutally slaughtered and Napoleon himself is left beaten and emotionally broken. After the attack, Napoleon proclaims to his brother that the person he was died out there. But this revelation doesn't last long, and soon Napoleon sets out on yet another date with destiny on the open plains with his followers. Reminiscent of Kent Haruf, Olmstead's brilliantly expressive, condensed tale of resilience and dusty determination flows with the kind of literary cadence few writers have mastered. (May)

Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Table of Contents

Subjects


 

 

« Previous Book Lion of Ireland
Next Book » Queen Victoria: Demon Hunter