In his award-winning debut novel, “Howard Bahr casts a tale of war as powerful as any you’ll ever find” ( Southern Living). Written with profound empathy and meticulous attention to historical detail, The Black Flower brilliantly portrays the staggering human toll of America’s bloodiest conflict. Their fragile bond carries with it the hope of a life beyond the war, and the risk of a pain too devastating to endure. In the grisly aftermath of one of the Confederate army’s most disastrous campaigns, Anna and Bushrod seek salvation and understanding in each other. There, he falls under the care of Anna Hereford, who bears her own scars from years of relentless bloodshed and tragedy. Wounded in the battle, Bushrod is taken to a makeshift hospital on a nearby plantation. Against all odds, Bushrod has survived three years of war unscathed-but his luck is about to run out. Bushrod Carter, a twenty-six-year-old rifleman from Cumberland, Mississippi. Dirty, exhausted, and hungry, the Confederate soldiers form a line of battle across an open field. John Bell Hood’s Army of Tennessee prepares to launch an assault on Union forces near Franklin, Tennessee. A Confederate soldier confronts the horror of battle and the power of grace in this “poignant, haunting, and important” novel of the Civil War ( The Tennessean, Nashville).Ī New York Times Notable Book and Winner of the William Boyd Award for Best Military Novel
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