Right away March is placed in a compromising position in his effort to save a dying soldier, eventually having to let him go as they struggle together to cross the river. The story moves quickly from “sweet words” to gruesome descriptions of battle and desperate escape. Set during the Civil War, the book opens with a letter March is writing to Marmee and the girls, taken from Little Women. Geraldine Brooks’ writing is aggressive: poking, prodding and shaking the reader out of complacency. Brooks places you in a decidedly gray-shaded world which is not for the faint of heart. Reader beware: you must be willing to set aside any pre-conceived, black and white notions about Little Women in order to appreciate March. March succeeds in taking characters of mythical proportion and bringing them down to earth, turning them into living, breathing people, vastly more interesting, with decided with feet of clay. She takes that risk a step further by fleshing out Marmee, the quintessential mother figure. March, in her Pulitzer Prize-winning book, March (Penguin Books, 2005). Geraldine Brooks presents a bold and provocative story centered on the “shadow” character of Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women, Mr. Historical fiction is a risky genre, especially if the author is tackling a beloved American classic.
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