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March von Geraldine Brooks
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March (2006. Auflage)

von Geraldine Brooks

MitgliederRezensionenBeliebtheitDurchschnittliche BewertungDiskussionen
6,6782761,406 (3.76)726
Die Autorin hat in diesem Buch die Lebensgeschichte einer der bedeutendsten amerikanischen Familien nachgezeichnet. Louisa May Alcott hat Ende des 19. Jahrhunderts das Leben ihrer Familie in dem autobiografisch gefärbten Roman "Little Women" ("Betty und ihre Schwestern": zuletzt BA 7/96) beschrieben. Dies Buch und die Tagebücher des Familienvaters Bronson Alcott bilden die Grundlage für den Roman. Aus der Ich-Perspektive erzählt ein idealistischer Prediger aus den Nordstaaten, der mit 40 Jahren als Feldgeistlicher in den Bürgerkrieg zieht, beseelt von der Vorstellung, an der Sklavenbefreiung mitwirken zu können. An der Realität des Krieges zerbricht er fast. Als er zufällig seine Jugendliebe wiedertrifft merkt er, dass er seinen Idealen nicht treu bleiben kann. Im 2. Teil des Romans wird seine Ehefrau die Erzählerin, die ans Krankenbett ihres verwundeten Mannes gerufen wird und feststellen muss, dass sein Lebenswille fast gebrochen ist. Brooks (vgl. a. BA 7/02; 10/02) schreibt wieder ungemein fesselnd, arbeitet ihre Charaktere gut aus und beschreibt die historischen Zusammenhänge gut. Empfehlenswert… (mehr)
Mitglied:Imprinted
Titel:March
Autoren:Geraldine Brooks
Info:Penguin Books (2006), Paperback, 304 pages
Sammlungen:Deine Bibliothek
Bewertung:****1/2
Tags:American, 19th century, New England, Civil War, historical fiction, psychological, fathers and daughters

Werk-Informationen

Auf freiem Feld. Roman von Geraldine Brooks

  1. 131
    Kleine Frauen von Louisa May Alcott (infiniteletters, kiwiflowa, Booksloth)
  2. 60
    Sargassomeer von Jean Rhys (CGlanovsky)
    CGlanovsky: Classic stories (Little Women/Jane Eyre) re-imagined through the experiences of characters who are important to the plot while being almost entirely unseen.
  3. 84
    Unterwegs nach Cold Mountain von Charles Frazier (1Owlette)
  4. 10
    American Bloomsbury von Susan Cheever (bibliothequaire)
    bibliothequaire: Gives an historical account of the life of Bronson Alcott (who was Brooks' inspiration for Mr. March) and the transcendentalist community in Concord.
  5. 11
    The Widow of the South von Robert Hicks (bnbookgirl)
  6. 22
    Property von Valerie Martin (RidgewayGirl)
    RidgewayGirl: Another award winning work that sheds light on the full horror of the results of slavery.
  7. 12
    Im Herbst von Jeffrey Lent (1Owlette)
  8. 13
    Gilead. von Marilynne Robinson (Anonymer Nutzer)
  9. 03
    Wo die Helden schlafen ["Redemption Falls"] von Joseph O'Connor (1Owlette)
  10. 03
    Hester von Paula Reed (KatyBee)
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A slender book about guilt, idealism, the lies we tell and truths we avoid, set during the US civil war in the context of the March family at the heart of Louisa May Alcott's novel 'Little Women'. I liked it but wasn't really moved. ( )
  breathslow | Jan 27, 2024 |
In this tale of the adventures of Mr. March - the absent father of Meg/Jo/Beth/Amy from Alcott's famed Little Women, Brooks presents us with a likable, idealistic young lad and then spends the next 250+ pages charting the course of his gradual disillusionment. From the seductive compromises of abolitionist John Brown (can evil means be justified in pursuit of a just cause?) to the hypocritical justifications of white slave owners; from the dishonesty of uncompromising honesty (where does virtue end and sanctimony begin?) to the often incompatible exigences of fairness vs. self-interest; from the glib affectations of organized religions to the disenchantments of idealized love, our poor protagonist must first come to grips with the realization that life is full of moral ambiguities and compromises, and then figure out whether he possesses the moral flexibility and fortitude to persevere.

Along the way, Brooks plunges us into the midst of the bloody battle of Ball's Bluff, allows us to linger for a while at the plantation home of a gentlemanly slaveowner who uses his erudition to justify his monsterous treatment of the slaves he manages, introduces us to such transcendental luminaries as Thoreau and Emerson, provides us with a peep into the lives of some of the families that served as stations along the Underground Railroad, lingers for several chapters at a "contraband plantation" where former slaves ("contraband") are paid to grow cotton for the union cause, forces us to witness several horrific interactions with war-emboldened villains and profiteers, and terminates amidst the horrors of a Civil War hospital.

Worth reading the afterward to appreciate the extent to which characters and incidents depicted in this tale are based on the first-person accounts of actual individuals and incidents. Ironically, however, I feel like Brooks' emphasis on realism comes at the expense of delving deeper into the consequences of March's spiritual struggle. By the end of the novel it's clear that March is no longer the idealist he once was, but it's unclear how he is going to cope with his new-found wisdom or how these new truths are going to reshape his nature, his career, and his marriage going forward.

Brooks' storytelling is lovely, particularly her gift for evocating nature, time, and place. I'm less a fan of her character-building, but in this case feel like it would be wrong to ding her for characters that act in inconsistent ways because that's arguably part of the authenticity of the tale - that, when confronted with moral ambiguity and inconsistency, there often is no *correct* response, leaving us humans to muddle through as best we can. Overall, a fine example of historical fiction and a satisfying if not spectacular read. ( )
  Dorritt | Dec 14, 2023 |
I’ve always been a fan of “Little Women” and grew up in the area in which it was set, was forced to read Thoreau and enjoyed Emerson, so I felt quite cozy in this opposite side tale of Mr. March, the little women’s father. Brooks has based her portrayal of March on the reality of Louisa May Alcott’s father and the times then when people got pretty serious ideas about vegetarianism (wouldn’t even give their poor sheep a haircut as the fleece ‘belonged to the sheep’) and such. New England at that time was working its way through the Unitarian Universalist process as well, and there was a mighty group of male intellectuals discussing the world while their wives were kept quiet and busy in the home. (Sigh).
The March in this book is a bit of a pain in the arse. I personally would have smacked his sanctimonious face now and again, as he in this story blames himself for every bad thing that happened in his civil war experience and continually blunders about making things worse for everyone, not least his family starving at home, but directed to give their scant food to the poor. He is a bit tiresome and tends to offend with his little ways, but despite this the story is riveting as an uncommon view of the civil war. (It is a brutal view, with many entrails, so the uneasy stomached may well want to avoid)
I enjoyed the chapters where Marmee is given a voice, too, and shows herself to be a woman of spirit and her own feelings about her tiresome husband. She adds a leavening that helps cut through his often overblown self-abnegation.

A fast read and a good one. I enjoyed it quite a bit, despite the seeming Forest Gumpian ‘all the famous people hung out with March’ issue. It’s likely Alcott’s father knew the big men of the time (big men, very small pond) (see what I did there? Because Walden pond IS a very small pond...), so I didn’t find it as annoying as the actual Forest Gump story.

I’ll be seeking out more by this author. ( )
  Dabble58 | Nov 11, 2023 |
As the North reels under a series of unexpected defeats during the dark first year of the American Civil War, one man leaves behind his family to aid the Union cause. His experiences will utterly change his marriage and challenge his most ardently held beliefs. Riveting and elegant as it is meticulously researched, March is an extraordinary novel woven out of the lore of American history.

From Louisa May Alcott’s beloved classic Little Women, Geraldine Brooks has taken the character of the absent father, March, who has gone off to war leaving his wife and daughters. To evoke him, Brooks turned to the journals and letters of Bronson Alcott, Louisa May’s father, a friend and confidant of Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau.

In Brooks’ telling, March emerges as an idealistic chaplain in the little known backwaters of a war that will test his faith in himself and in the Union cause as he learns that his side, too, is capable of acts of barbarism and racism. As he recovers from a near mortal illness, he must reassemble his shattered mind and body, and find a way to reconnect with a wife and daughters who have no idea of the ordeals he has been through.


In "Little Women", the father figure is away for much of the story. This is Brooks' attempt to tell his story of his time away from the family during the American Civil War.

I dont know Little Women well enough to know how well Brooks ties the story in, and whether March's (and Mamie's) characters stack up against the previous books. However, March and the Civil War are the centre of the book, and Brooks pulls forward the problems of Slavery, the treatment of the slaves (and those wanting to free them) but the rebels and army who didnt want the Status Quo changing. It's the beatings, the cruelty, the killings etc - this makes the book sound more graphic than it is and whilst these are brought up, are not the centre of the story.

In summary: good book as a historical fiction book set during the American Civil War which is a reasonable addition to the "Little Women" canon. ( )
  nordie | Oct 14, 2023 |
I liked the way the story combined the lives we know from "Little Women" with the letters written by March followed by his harsh experiences during the Civil War. Marmee is written up as more of a spitfire than one would guess from Alcott's story. It did take me some while to recognize March as a separate person from Bronson Alcott, whom he was modeled after. This was quite an interesting book, but at some point it started to seem fantastical--all the ways Grace shows up in March's life are more coincidental than would occur in real life. ( )
  juniperSun | Aug 9, 2023 |
Brooks is capable of strong writing about the natural world and nicely researched effects about the human one (on the eve of a battle, March sees ''the surgeon flinging down sawdust to receive the blood that was yet to flow''), but the book she has produced makes a distressing contribution to recent trends in historical fiction, which, after a decade or so of increased literary and intellectual weight, seems to be returning to its old sentimental contrivances and costumes.
 
Fascinating insight, don’t read if you’re a Little Women purist.
 

» Andere Autoren hinzufügen (20 möglich)

AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Geraldine BrooksHauptautoralle Ausgabenberechnet
Easton, RichardErzählerCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt

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Jo said sadly, "We haven't got father, and shall not have him for a long time." She didn't say "perhaps never," but each silently added it, thinking of father far away, where the fighting was. ======= Louisa May Alcott, Little Women
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For Darleen and Cassie --
by no means little women.
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This is what I write to her: The clouds tonight embossed the sky.
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I am no longer eager, bold & strong.
All that is past;
I am ready not to do
At last, at last,
My half day's work is done,
And this is all my part.
I give a patient God
My patient heart.


(attributed to Cephas White- composed by an unnamed patient of Louisa May Alcott - transcribed in a letter to her aunt that is held among the rare manuscripts in the Library of Congress.)
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Die Autorin hat in diesem Buch die Lebensgeschichte einer der bedeutendsten amerikanischen Familien nachgezeichnet. Louisa May Alcott hat Ende des 19. Jahrhunderts das Leben ihrer Familie in dem autobiografisch gefärbten Roman "Little Women" ("Betty und ihre Schwestern": zuletzt BA 7/96) beschrieben. Dies Buch und die Tagebücher des Familienvaters Bronson Alcott bilden die Grundlage für den Roman. Aus der Ich-Perspektive erzählt ein idealistischer Prediger aus den Nordstaaten, der mit 40 Jahren als Feldgeistlicher in den Bürgerkrieg zieht, beseelt von der Vorstellung, an der Sklavenbefreiung mitwirken zu können. An der Realität des Krieges zerbricht er fast. Als er zufällig seine Jugendliebe wiedertrifft merkt er, dass er seinen Idealen nicht treu bleiben kann. Im 2. Teil des Romans wird seine Ehefrau die Erzählerin, die ans Krankenbett ihres verwundeten Mannes gerufen wird und feststellen muss, dass sein Lebenswille fast gebrochen ist. Brooks (vgl. a. BA 7/02; 10/02) schreibt wieder ungemein fesselnd, arbeitet ihre Charaktere gut aus und beschreibt die historischen Zusammenhänge gut. Empfehlenswert

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