Chalk's Woman - Hardcover

Ballantine, David

 
9780312873486: Chalk's Woman

Inhaltsangabe

David Ballantine's debut novel Chalk's Woman, is a story about freedom, liberation, and love. Set in the violent backdrop of the waning months of the Civil War, Chalk's Woman addresses violence and redemption as seen through the eyes of a girl maturing into a woman.

Ann, a fourteen-year-old girl, wakes up after a terrible explosion in a make-shift hospital during the waning months of the Civil War--her house no longer stands and her mother is dead, and a young Dr. Frazier amputated her arm in order to to prevent infection. . Homeless and an orphaned, Ann feels her only option is to travel west.

She leaves Vicksburg on the Santa Fe Trail and meets a troupe of orphaned children like herself and joins up with them. Together they fight against the hardships of the wild frontier: abominable weather, savage Indians, and starvation all the way to Kansas where they meet and, much to his chagrin, fall in love with Chalk.

Chalk's not the nicest of men, and he sure does have a drinking problem, but from the moment Chalk and Ann see each other, they know their lives will forever be entwined.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

David Ballantine lives in Bearsville, New York.

Rezensionen

Maimed and orphaned during the Civil^B War, Ann travels west to carve out an independent life for herself. Joining forces with a group of frightened children whose parents have died of cholera along the arduous Santa Fe Trail, she manages to bring her little brood to safety despite bad weather, a severe shortage of food, the threat of Indians, and the fact that^B she has only one arm Settling in a small frontier town with no money or material resources, Ann stoically accepts her fate and her responsibility. When she falls in love with Chalk, a less-than-perfect cowhand with a drinking problem and big dreams, she resolutely forges a strong and loyal family unit. A somber testament to the triumph of the pioneer spirit. Margaret Flanagan
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

A first-time author in his 70s, Ballantine draws on his 15 years of experience as editor of military titles for Bantam, and also on his experience as an antique firearms expert, to deliver this rugged survival tale set just after the Civil War. Protagonist Ann is 13 when she loses both parents and one of her arms in the war. Five years later, heading west on the Santa Fe trail to Oregon with her exploitative adoptive parents, Ann escapes to help four children who've been orphaned by cholera. After they winter with Sioux Indians, who save their lives, Ann and the children settle in Kansas, where Ann falls in love with Chalk, a cheerful, hard-drinking cowboy. Ann gives birth to his child the same day he is arrested for killing gunslinger Kay Cee Smith. He's not only acquitted, he wins a reward for gunning down the wanted man. Fortified by the reward money, Chalk, Ann and all of the children set out to pan for gold. A final showdown with more gunslingers brings the novel to a close. Choppy prose and static characters who talk in platitudes make what could have been an inspiring tale of pioneer survival just a series of disjointed events strung together. Oddly absent is an account of most of the passage along the Santa Fe trail (the children's winter with the Indians is summed up in two paragraphs), which could have served as the centerpiece of the narrative, yet instead is just one of many devices engineered to move the plot along. (Dec.) FYI: The author's brother, Ian, is well known in the industry, having developed three major American paperback imprints, including Ballantine Books.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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9780812579208: Chalk's Woman

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ISBN 10:  0812579208 ISBN 13:  9780812579208
Verlag: St Martin's Press, 2001
Softcover