Red Horse (An Uncivil War) (Volume 1), by M J Logue
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Red Horse (An Uncivil War) (Volume 1), by M J Logue
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“Well, what is it that you fight for?” Hollie scratched the back of his neck thoughtfully. “Good question. Me and Nat were never fussy whose gold we took, back in the day, so long as it was forthcoming. Ask me a week ago, and I’d have said we was both in it for the money.” He was eyeing the last of Sarah’s good bread thoughtfully, and Luce pushed it over. “And now?” he prompted. “Now?” The redhead gave a slow, cold smile. “Vengeance, brat. Sheer bloody vengeance.” October 1642 When idealistic young poet Luce Pettitt volunteers as a junior officer in the Army of Parliament, he expects to take up arms in the noble cause of liberty against the tyrant King, Charles I. What he takes up instead is a post with a scruffy ex-mercenary who couldn’t care less which side he’s fighting for, so long as he gets paid, and an equally disenchanted cavalry troop. Captain Hollie Babbitt doesn’t expect the world to do him any favours, based on previous bitter experience. He’s lost everything once already - his wife, his good name, his career, his hope. He doesn't expect to regain it, in a war that he doesn't care about, with comrades he doesn't want. All he’s got against the might of the King’s Army is a posh poet, a bad-tempered horse, and a troop made up of every rebel, dissenter and horse-thief the rest of the Army didn’t want. And his best friend, the charming ruffian Rackhay, whose covered Hollie’s back since they were both sixteen years old and brawling in the Low Countries. Dame Fortune isn’t done with Hollie Babbitt yet, not by a long chalk. But he's got nothing else to lose... has he?
Red Horse (An Uncivil War) (Volume 1), by M J Logue - Amazon Sales Rank: #6216558 in Books
- Published on: 2015-11-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 8.00" h x .89" w x 5.00" l, .85 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 356 pages
Red Horse (An Uncivil War) (Volume 1), by M J Logue About the Author Writer, mad cake lady, re-enactor, historian. Been slightly potty about the clankier side of Ironside for around 20 years, and lists amongst my heroes in this unworthy world Sir Thomas Fairfax, Elizabeth Cromwell and John Webster (for his sense of humour.) When not purveying historically-accurate cake to various re-enactment groups across the country, M.J. Logue can usually be discovered practising in her garden with a cavalry backsword.
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Most helpful customer reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Just as uncivil as it probably was By Anna B It is 1642, and England is hovering on the brink of civil war. As yet, no major battles have been fought, but the armies are drawn up, the King has raised his colours and called to arms. The Parliamentarian Army under the Earl of Essex is a motley lot, an uneasy partnering of men who burn for the cause and a rabble of mercenaries, most of them veterans of the Thirty Years' War.Hollie Babbitt is one such veteran. Uncouth and bedraggled, this red-haired captain does not at all live up to Lucifer Pettitt's expectations on an officer, and this young man can't help but wonder why his uncle the Earl of Essex has chosen to place him under Babbitt’s command. Some sort of punishment?Babbitt wonders the same: why has he been saddled with Luce and what exactly is that prat Essex playing at?And so opens a story of soldiers and war, of understated bravery and loyalty among friends. All of this against the murky political waters of the times, at times utterly incomprehensible to those taxed with navigating through them.After the battle of Edgehill, things change. Where before the men in the Parliamentarian Army were there just as much by chance as by conviction, the carnage of Edgehill hardens them. Babbitt loses his best friend at Edgehill. From that moment on, the war becomes personal – on the outside, Captain Babbitt fights for money, but within he screams for vengeance.On the surface of things, Red Horse is therefore a novel about the dirty and sordid matter of war. Men die, men are wounded, the rain pours down in buckets leaving everyone dirtier and muddier and sick and with festering wounds and with holes in their stockings and lice in their hair – in general, not the chirpiest of settings. The men are often cold and hungry, just as often scared and angry, and more or less constantly confused.Not only does M J Logue present us with a detailed and tangible setting, she also parades quite the cast of characters before the reader, first and foremost Hollie Babbitt and his troop of scruffy, battle-hardened men, troopers who mostly don’t care who wins as long as they survive.Many people have written books about war, about comrades-in-arms who stick together through thick and thin. What makes Red Horse so universally appealing is the other story, the one hidden within, so to say. That story is about loneliness, about the abject despair of having no family, no home, no-one who truly cares if you live or die. It is about being utterly alone despite the press of men around you, of living in an emotional vacuum that is so unbearable you no longer feel as if you exist. Hollie Babbitt is one such damaged man, and the way in which M J Logue depicts his situation is all the more effective for being so unsentimental. As I turn the pages, Hollie Babbitt not only takes on shape and colour, but he also becomes a person I develop strong protective feelings for – which he hates, just as he has problems accepting Luce’s compassion and genuine concern for him.I finished this book at two in the morning. The author had cruelly left me with a weak ray of hope as concerns Hollie’s future life, which is, of course, why the next book is already on my Kindle.My only gripe with this book is the recurring head-hopping – it distracts from the story and is an unnecessary beauty spot on this otherwise excellent read. This is also why I award it four rather than five stars.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. A riveting read! By Francine Howarth This is an action packed novel, with well-written dialogue and unique author style in narrative, which indeed reflects the inner voice and thoughts from the characters' perspectives.In chapter one of this swashbuckling and riveting read, we're afforded a little insight to Captain Hollie Babbitt's earlier military career and of life's toll upon young soldiers of fortune. It's a raw account of a soldier's lot in the 17th century, in which the hardened troopers don't scent their words for the fairer sex reader, and the scene is set in Amsterdam 1625, where Babbitt and Nathaniel Rackhay become men-at-arms. Albeit they are worlds apart in social standing, neither could know they will become akin to argumentative brothers. One is of a teasing bent, the other as angry as his hair is red, and embittered with it.By chapter two, 1642, the soldiers of fortune are back in England where all hell is in the offing. Charles I is kicking up a dust storm across the countryside in mad pursuit to rally loyalists to the crown. All the while Parliament is a steaming hot-bed of dissent and dire intent to bring the king to his knees, or at least haul him to Parliament's heel. And there you have it, civil war is nigh, and when the first musket is fired, Babbitt and Rackhay know their time has come to make a mark on the backsides of the Royalist Army, but Prince Rupert has other ideas.Warfare is one thing, but there's nothing worse than suspecting you have an internal spy in your camp, for that's when the peculiarities and ambitions of a senior officer draws covert attention. Thus, throughout skirmishes and a battle royal at Edgehill, Hollie Babbitt's nose for scenting trouble with capital T plagues him. But war has a way of stealing the day, of knocking you sideways, turning reason on its head until nothing makes any sense: then reality kicks-in, and there's only one path ahead. Do you take it, or say to Hell with It? Ah, well, only Hollie Babbitt can reveal the answer, so read his story: you won't be disappointed. Me, I'm hot-footing for a second rendezvous with the cap'n.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. More than just a Civil War story By Evelyn Tidman - historical fiction author I was not quite sure what to expect of this novel. I knew, of course, that it was a novel about the Civil War. But it turned out to be more than that. Told from the perspective of two principle men, the irascible Hollie Babbit and the kind-hearted young Luce Pettit, we learn of their fears, their struggles, we are right there with their emotions as their uneasy alliance gradually grows into friendship. We get to know them well.But it is a tale of war, of death and fear, heroism and foolhardiness. The battle of Edgehill is brilliantly depicted from the point of view of the Parliamentarians, and I have to say I was shocked when . . . but that would be giving too much away! Suffice to say, I did not see that coming. I happen to have written about Edgehill also, from the opposite side, so I know that the historical detail there was accurate. If I had any criticism, and it was a little one, it would be that I am not a fan of bad language. I can see why the author used it, all blokes together, and I have to say I had no intention of letting it spoil my enjoyment of the book. In fact, I could not put it down.A brilliant book, excellent read, and I thoroughly enjoyed it. Not only would I heartily recommend it, but I already have the next book in the series Command the Raven on my Kindle, and I am looking forward to getting started on that.
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