Powerfully entertaining and worthy of five stars. First and foremost, I couldn't stop reading the story. Solid characters driving an interesting story that covered a lot of ground in a relatively short span of time. From Arkansas at the beginning of the American Civil War to San Francisco seven years later. Second, solid characters to care about—one family's series of tragic events and how the war changed the lives of four siblings and all their dreams of the future. Third, did I mention the characters?
Gear is a wonderful story teller. Don't be fooled by the lack of publications under the name William Gear. Look up W. Michael Gear and there are literally dozens upon dozens of stories ranging from first class science fiction to the history of Native Americans. A prolific writer who came to fame literally writing a history of Native Americans with his wife Kathleen O'Neil Gear. Elements of this work, This Scorched Earth: A Novel of the Civil War and the American West, have appeared in various other stories over the years and long time fans will recognize his unmistakable writing style.
The story of the Hancock family as war came to their part of rural Arkansas is nothing short of an American tragedy. It's relevance in the timeline of our nation's history strikes a particularly macabre note as current day Americans bandy about talk of another Civil War, most likely by those ignorant of history. Ignorant of the wreckage of lives and loss of personal property that resulted from rich white men insisting on the right to enslave another human being, but needing the poor to do the fighting. Dress it up any way you choose, but the southern states in the 1860s were willing to blow up our fledgling nation for the right to own people.
Gear is very particular in how he portrays war. Without judgment or delving into issues of morality, he instead focuses on the impact of the war on the soldiers. Bodies being blown to bits in graphic detail. The extreme devastation of life and limb. And like with all wars, it's often the young and innocent who bear the brunt of the maiming and killing.
In, This Scorched Earth, Gear follows the lives of three brothers and a sister whose lives are broken by the war: rape, human degradation, shattered souls and wounded hearts. Innocence lost. Minds lost. Love lost. As the war dragged on for years, evil was unleashed on America. Families torn apart. A lifetime of hard work stripped bare or burnt to the ground. Death, starvation, mental illness and permanent physical disabilities spreading like a plague as armies fought, neighbors turned on neighbors and bad actors pillaged and plundered with impunity.
Each of the siblings suffered their own personal hell. Each absorbed tragedy after tragedy; and finding themselves traveling the road to perdition, each must look deep into heart and soul. Either find a way to carry on or give in to the darkness that has stolen the light from their eyes.
It was not difficult to see where Gear was taking his story. He built, This Scorched Earth, around survival and redemption. Free from religious teachings about morality and sin, and by allowing his characters to simply react, respond and navigate their lives as human beings responding to circumstances, This Scorched Earth, is classic Gear: a novel showcasing the best and the worst of human nature.
I thought the story had a little bit of a pulp fiction feel to it, only more complex and nuanced. In some ways his characters are archetypes and easy to identify with. Most everything is out in the open: low hanging fruit to be enjoyed without much effort, as well as deeper concepts and ideas to be mulled over. This Scorched Earth is another fine piece of writing that will only further cement Gear's standing as an outstanding American novelist.