I'm on a Sunfire kick right now and have taken it upon myself to reread all of the ones I currently have. Actually reviewing this one without bias is impossible because I love it too much, but I will try my best.
I love this book. Out of all the Sunfires I've read, to me, this one has the best plot. It of course takes place during the Civil War and focuses on Susannah and her family. We follow her for about a year, with a couple of flashbacks at the beginning, and see the pure struggles and horror this war actually brought. There is a scene at the beginning very similar to the hospital scene from Gone With the Wind. You have plantations catching fire, you have armies living with the main characters, you have more than one major characters die. This book brings the plot.
I also think Susannah is one of the strongest protagonists out of these Sunfire books. She's not just a kind, sweet girl who is always doing the right thing. Her choices aren't always perfect. There are consequences to her actions, positive and negaitve. She is an active part of her story and what she does affects her and her family. She's got a real sass to her and you root for her from the get go. You feel her pain and fear, and you go on her journey rushing toward the end of the awful war that has ruined her way of life.
There are also strong characters that surround her. Patricia and Garnet (Susannah's sister and potential sister in-law) are actually developed as characters and have arcs. Garnet in particular is a wonderful foil to Susannah as your typical southern belle who, underneath the polished glamour, is a complex character who hides her real self.
I also think this book has strong romance. Both suitors are believable, both in their relationships with Susannah and as people. Evan in particular, the childhood sweetheart and Confederate, feels like a real example of a young man during this period. He was raised to believe in certain things, and this war tears him apart from the inside. Also, I just LOVE Caine.
I must talk about the elephant in the review, slavery. This is without a doubt, the most cringe worthy part of the book. While this book was written in the 80s, I still don't understand why slavery was tiptoed around as it was. Most of the time, Susannah and other characters refer to them as servants, rather than slaves. All the servants were treated nicely and had good lives. Mr. Dellinger never whipped his servants as far as Susannah was aware. The servants were never ripped apart from their families. Servants weren't raped by their masters.
But I digress.
Yeah, not very historically accurate. It reads more like my Grandma preaching over Sunday lunch that slaves actually needed their masters and most had really good lives. I'm so sure. There was a scene where Susannah helped a slave escape, and I hoped her ideas towards slavery would progress and evolve, but they really didn't. After this, slavery is kind of just put to the side. Even later, after the first character death, we are led to believe that this character had always disagreed with slavery, which is complete BS and out of character. I will say that all of the slave characters are written as good people. They don't seem stereotyped to me, but then again I'm a white women so I might not be the best judge of that.
I've re-read this book more times than any Sunfire. It might not be the best, but it is easily my favorite. I would recommend this this book, despite it's flaws toward the slavery accuracy. However, if that is something that would bother you, totally understandable. Though, believe it or not, there are other Sunfire books that are worse in terms of slavery. Anyway, to me, it's one of my favorite books and I will end up reading it again.