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The Other Side by Kevin McColley β€” book cover

The Other Side

by Kevin McColley
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Overview

A historically precise and resolutely unsentimental look at the Civil War, The Other Side is an epic that follows one young man's harrowing personal journey from innocence through soul-destroying experience as he becomes a follower of Quantrill's Raiders.

It was a lesson seventeen-year-old Jacob Wilson would come to learn all too well: in the midst of any fiercely contentious and violent conflict, you must choose one side or become the enemy of both. Raised on a small Ohio farm just across the river from Kentucky, Jacob remains largely indifferent to the impending struggle between the North and the South. But then his father β€” against his own better judgment β€” allows two runaway slaves, Isaac and his daughter Sarah, to be hidden on their land. Hostile to them at first, Jacob soon finds himself drawn to the beautiful Sarah, gradually falling in love β€” and in lust β€” with her. When the local militia discovers the slaves, Jacob's world is irrevocably turned upside down as he is forced to watch the militiamen abuse his mother and destroy his home. When Jacob can take the abuse no more, he kills one of the soldiers and flees for his life, crossing to the other side of the river, heading south and then wandering west, no goal in mind other than escape from the men he assumes are hunting for him.

Now a solitary renegade on the open frontier, Jacob encounters a wild group of rebels led by none other than the already legendary William Quantrill, nominally fighting for the Southern cause but in fact a ruthless outlaw whose reign of terror threatens to destroy everyone and everything he and his raiders encounter. Drawn into the frenzy of death and destruction these men foster, Jacob, once repelled then desensitized by the brutality of war, finds himself becoming more and more inured to the gory violence that saturates his new life.

Drawing on factual accounts of the battles waged and the raids inflicted upon the innocent citizens of much of the midwest by Quantrill and his band β€” including the likes of the notorious Jesse and Frank James, and Cole Younger β€” author Kevin McColley brings to vivid life the almost surreal insanity of the time. Written in precise, compelling prose, the narrative follows young Jacob as he succumbs to the madness, both fascinated and repulsed by the random, seemingly undirected violence that defines the war as he knows it. And each step of the way he is haunted, pursued by the specter of the officer he killed back in Ohio, who taunts him, inciting him to kill and kill again.

An insightful look at a poorly understood epoch of the War Between the States, The Other Side is a brilliant re-creation of one of the darkest periods in history, and a stunning evocation of how the inhumanity of war diminishes the soul.

About the Author, Kevin McColley

While this is Kevin McColley's first adult novel, he is the author

of several critically acclaimed novels for young adults. He lives in

Bemidji, Minnesota.

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Editorials

Library Journal

On the eve of the Civil War, 17-year-old Jacob Wilson is happy to stay on his family's Ohio farm and ignore the looming belligerence. But he is forced by events to choose sides and is plunged into a world of violence in the border states of Missouri and Kansas, where the Civil War is anything but civil. Jacob joins a band of raiders led by William Quantrill and preys on "jayhawkers" and Union men. His descent into murder and madness is described in straightforward yet elegant prose. Although the main character is fictitious, McColley (Praying to a Laughing God) supplies many historically accurate details, particularly in the vivid and bloody raid on Lawrence, KS. The author gives the reader sharp and pungent descriptions of the countryside and of the horrors of internecine warfare. This is a good tale well told, but the extreme violence may put off some readers. Recommended for larger public libraries and those with strong Civil War collections.--Tom Vincent, P.L. of Charlotte & Mecklenburg Cty., NC Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.\

Kirkus Reviews

A horrific tale by the author of Praying to a Laughing God (1998) about guerrilla fighting during the Civil War, featuring monsters on both sides. Blame that on the violent, bloody, and brutalizing conflictβ€”McColley does. He gives us Jacob Wilson, a 17-year-old Ohio farm boy much like any other kid his age at the outset, who is changed drastically by terrible events. It's 1860, the war merely months away. The Wilsons have been hiding a pair of runaway slaves, one of them a pretty young girl with whom Jacob has fallen in love. Led by an arrogant lout of a sergeant, a search party of local militia suddenly descends on the family. A neighbor, a close friend of the Wilsons, helps the slaves escape and is hanged by Sergeant McGown for his trouble. Jacob goes berserk, takes an ax to McGown and another soldier who gets in the way, then flees. After some half-crazed wandering, he winds up in Missouri as a rider in Confederate partisan William Quantrill's infamous band of mounted murderers. (Ideology has nothing to do with which side people end up on in this deeply cynical tale.) Haunted by what he construes as McGown's inescapable ghost, Jacob transforms himself into a remorselessly efficient killing machine. No Union sympathizer, no matter how young or casually identified, is safe. Jacob and his mostly teenaged cohorts slaughter zestfully, insisting quite accurately that Yankee guerrillas are doing the same. Ugly act follows despicable deed, and by the time Quantrill's marauders confront their grim destiny, only shreds of humanity still cling to Jacob. The intelligent, compassionate, and talented McColley does his best to arouse sympathy for his beset young protagonist, but thelaterchapters are such a catalogue of horrors that readers are unlikely to be persuaded.

Book Details

Published
June 13, 2000
Publisher
Simon and Schuster
Pages
384
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780743242622

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