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A Moment in the Sun

By John Sayles

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Product Description

It’s 1897. Gold has been discovered in the Yukon. New York is under the sway of Hearst and Pulitzer. And in a few months, an American battleship will explode in a Cuban harbor, plunging the U.S. into war. This is the story of that extraordinary moment: the turn of the twentieth century, as seen by one of the greatest storytellers of our time. Shot through with a lyrical intensity and stunning detail, A MOMENT IN THE SUN takes the entire era in its sights – from the white-racist coup in Wilmington, north Carolina to the bloody dawn of the U.S. interventionism overseas. Beginning with Hod Brackenridge searching for his fortune in the North, and hurtling forward across five years and a half a dozen countries – through the voices of men like Royal Scott, an African American infantryman whose life outside of the military has been destroyed, and Diosdado Concepcion, A Filipino insurgent preparing to fight against his country’s new colonizers – this is a story as big as its subject: history rediscovered through the lives of the people who made it happen. 955p.

Editorial Reviews

Though known best as a filmmaker (Eight Men Out), Sayles is also an accomplished novelist (Union Dues), whose latest will stand among the finest work on his impressive résumé. Weighing in at nearly 1,000 pages, the behemoth recalls E.L. Doctorow's Ragtime, Pynchon's Against the Day, and Dos Passos's USA trilogy, tracking mostly unconnected characters whose collective stories create a vast, kaleidoscopic panorama of the turn of the last century. Hod Brackenridge is a miner who gets swindled in the Alaskan gold rush, is strong-armed into a boxing match, and ends up on the run after his opponent dies in the ring. Diosdado, son of a Spanish diplomat, turns against his country and the United States to fight for independence in the Philippines. The most emotionally connected story line involves the black American soldiers who breeze through fighting in Cuba but get stuck in a quagmire in the Philippines while their families back home in Wilmington, N.C., endure a campaign of murder and intimidation that forces an affluent and educated black family out of their home and into poverty in New York City. Naturally, there are cameos—Mark Twain, president McKinley—and period details aplenty that help alleviate the occasional slow patches—indeed, Hod's story line loses steam toward the end—but the flaws and muck of this big, rangy novel are part of what make it so wonderful. (May)

[Page ]. Copyright 2010 PWxyz LLC

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