The Standing Rabbit
The Year of Jubilo by Howard Bahr
The Year of Jubilo by Howard Bahr
Couldn't load pickup availability
Howard Bahr, 'The Year of Jubilo,' published by Henry Holt and Company (New York), stated first edition of 2000.
The Year of Jubilo is a 376 page hardcover measuring 9 1/2" x 6 1/2". The dust jacket is clean, with only two somewhat unnoticeable 1" impression marks that feed though to the front cover. The last page of the book has inexplicably come loose from an otherwise tight binding and the rest of the book appears to be in very good, unread condition with tight binding and clean unmarked pages.
Book Summary
Howard Bahr's award-winning debut novel, The Black Flower, was embraced by readers and critics as one of the finest Civil War novels written in recent years, earning him comparisons to Stephen Crane and William Faulkner. Now, in The Year of Jubilo, Bahr returns to that time period to weave a story even more powerful and epic in scope--the unforgettable tale of a confederate solider returning home to find that life and love will never be the same.
On a balmy spring day in 1865 Gawain Harper approaches the town of Cumberland, Mississippi, where three years earlier he had boarded a train carrying the latest enlistees in the Mississippi Infantry. Unmoved by the Cause that motivated so many others, Gawain had joined up only when Morgan Rhea's father told him that he would never wed his beloved Morgan unless he did his part in the war effort.
Now, upon his safe arrival home, Gawain discovers postwar life is far from what he expected. Morgan has indeed waited for him, but before they can marry there are scores to be settled. For in Cumberland, yet another battle is being waged, and the enemy is not the occupying Federal troops but the town's own "King" Solomon Gault, a deranged, manipulative man on a mission to restore his own brand of justice to a community turned upside down. As Gawain, with unexpected support from a diverse group of men, struggles to find a way to avenge the Rhea family's honor, he is drawn into an inexorable showdown with Gault that once again pits South against North, and dignoty against defeat.
A poignant and sweeping novel that reveals the human side of one of the pivotal moments in American history, The Year of Jubilo evokes a time of sorrow and defeat, of anarchy and violence, but also of hope and rebuilding. A brilliant achievement--and a grand entertainment--it is sure to catapult Howard Bahr to the top rank of American novelists.
ISBN: 0-8050-5972-5




