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Loading... The Whiskey Rebels: A Novelby David Liss
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I loved the characters and thought the story was very interesting, it kept me hooked. However, I did have problems following some of the events, I was a little lost as to how some of the characters jumped from one conclusion to another. This made it a little less enjoyable, but overall I definitely recommend this book to lovers of historical fiction. ( )A departure from Liss' Coffee Traders and the Conspiracy of Papers. While not as exciting as his earlier works, it was a good read. I ordered this while high on repeat viewings of "1776" and the build-up to the elections, but when it arrived, I had to ask myself "WHAT was I thinking?" This is not my style at all. I don't care much for thrillers or mysteries, and while colonial and post-revolutionary history interests me, it's not a passion. I must say, Liss did catch my interest immediately. His hero, Ethan Saunders, comes from a great tradition of intelligent rogues with secret sorrows. He also has created a heroine in much the same vein in Joan Maycott. Not so much of the secret sorrow there, but she's young when we meet her, and hasn't had time for many sorrows. Given that Liss' central characters are smart, reasonably interesting characters, I'd have hoped that the narrative would live up to them. Unfortunately I wasn't as captivated by it as I had hoped I'd be. It jumps about a good deal, which is disorienting, and it's dry and often difficult to push through. It's not bad, it just requires a good deal of work, which I'm not entirely sure it rewards in the end. I would say that for those readers who are students of the American economic model, this might prove more interesting than it did to me. The story echoes the sort of questionable business practices which inform today's headlines. Fascinating as a news story, particularly when your livelihood is at stake, but perhaps not so much in novel form. Still, for readers who are fans of this sort of novel, I suspect it will pay off handsomely. Here is a book that I probably would not have read except Amazon was giving it away free on the Kindle. That said, I really enjoyed the book. It moved a little slow in the beginning as it set up the characters, but then pick up the pace. I loved the way it captured the period in which it took place and mixed fictional characters with real people and events. The story is engaging and the plot twists are many. I may have to look at the authors other books after reading this one. Set in the years immediately following the American Revolution. The book follows Ethan Saunders, a disgraced soldier, and Joan Maycott, a young woman from the west. Saunders finds himself trying to help the woman he'd thought he'd marry when Cynthia's husband disappears. He begins to use the experiences he had as a spy for George Washington to find out what Cynthia's husband is up to. In a seemingly unrelated storyline, Joan Maycott and her husband have headed west only to find that they may have been swindled. It was an interesting book and really makes you want to go and read all the history behind it. 0.096 seconds to build listing
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