It is 1863, in Southern Louisiana. There are elements of both the blue and gray armies throughout the state, as well as some of the “irregulars” striking fear in all sides. In what feels like the quintessential James Lee Burke novel, we are introduced to several people who will lead us through the events of these days, making obvious the foundation for the future of this country once this civil war finally ended.
We see the landed gentry, the Lufkins, who hold strong to the ideals of plantation life by which they were raised. Then there is their son Wade, a major and complex figure, who believes in emancipation but aspires to being a gentleman. There is Hannah Laveau, a slave, thought to possibly be a witch but believed to have power. She is still seeking the infant son she lost at Shiloh during the battle. Pierre Cauchon, a civilian, is tasked with enforcing the law for whoever is in power, be it gray or blue. Darla Babineaux is another slave and victim of much abuse. Florence Milton is something different, a white woman and abolitionist who moved to the south in service of her goals of helping free black people. The last person given a point of view is Colonel Carleton Hayes, a syphilitic, increasingly mad hellion commanding a band of irregular soldiers in mayhem. He rode with Quantrill’s raiders in Missouri and Kansas before riding East to Louisiana.
Through the words and eyes of all of these, we learn of how civilians view what is happening and the likely future of the Confederacy, how some judge their leaders-both political and military, and how demoralized life has become for all. There are good and bad on all sides. There is a certain numbness at times, it appears.
As is usual with a Burke novel, the writing is perfect. His descriptions of the land, swamps, weather, sunsets are evocative of religious experiences or other sacred moments. The violence is visceral but in service to the story and, at times, to the level of a character’s depravity. This feels real, with the confusion, changing loyalties, fears and hopes, love and hate, that would happen in a time of such high emotion.
This may now be my favorite book from Burke. I also appreciate that so much of the story told here takes place in the same area walked by Dave Robicheaux, whose books all carry the legacy of the Civil War, slavery and reconstruction, and whose ghosts Dave sometimes saw on the Bayou.
Very highly recommended.
Thanks to Grove Atlantic and NetGalley.