Beyond the Dark Oceans
Exploring Beyond the Dark Oceans
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| Georgy |
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| Georgy |
In the autumn of 1860, Levi Anderson is thirteen years old, invisible in his own family, and happiest alone by the creek with a borrowed book. When the war comes, it takes his brothers first. What it leaves behind is worse than what it takes.
Beaten by the brother who stays, rescued by the sister who acts, Levi enlists in the 6th Indiana Infantry at fourteen, lying about his age to escape the only home he has ever known. He fights at Shiloh, Stones River, and Chickamauga, where a bullet tears open his face and Confederate soldiers take him prisoner.
What follows is Andersonville.
Thirty-three thousand men. A stockade. A creek turned to poison. A wooden rail called the dead line, beyond which the guards will shoot without warning. And a friendship with a man named Jim Dearborn that becomes the only thing worth holding on to — and the hardest thing to lose.
The Line Uncrossed is a novel about what a boy sees when everything is taken from him, and what he carries home when the war gives him back. Inspired by the true experience of a fourteen-year-old Indiana soldier who survived the worst place on earth and spent the next forty years teaching other people's children how to read.
There is a particular kind of historical novel that does not rely on spectacle to make its impact, and "The Line Uncrossed" belongs firmly in that category. Don McDonald approaches the American Civil War not as a sequence of grand set-pieces, but as a gradual narrowing of experience, where the individual is shaped—and ultimately reduced—by forces that do not announce themselves as dramatic, but as persistent. What emerges is not simply a story of conflict, but an examination of endurance, perception, and the quiet erosion of self.
Jim Dearborn’s introduction at Danville Prison provides an important counterbalance to Levi’s inward, observational nature. Where Levi retreats into silence and thought, Jim fills the space with voice, routine and presence. What develops between them is not simply a matter of shared survival but a genuine friendship. They come to rely on one another in a way that feels natural rather than stated, and it becomes clear that they do, in fact, like each other—something that matters in a setting where most human connections are stripped back to necessity.
By the time they reach Andersonville, that bond has deepened into something essential. They stay together, not out of convenience, but because neither would choose otherwise. Jim’s persistence and ability to keep talking, to keep imagining a future, holds Levi in place when he might otherwise withdraw completely. In return, Levi’s steadiness gives Jim something to anchor himself to when that forward-looking instinct begins to fail. Their relationship becomes the emotional centre of the novel, not through dramatic declaration, but through the simple, consistent fact that they choose each other, again and again, in circumstances that offer very little else.
She should have stayed in the shadows—but Leonor de Guzmán yearned for the sun
Castile in the 1330s is a place of constant turmoil. King Alfonso must contend with the incursions from the Muslim Marinids eager to reclaim Al-Andalus while struggling with repeated rebellions against his firm rule.
When Alfonso needs respite, he finds it in the arms of his Leonor—the most beautiful woman in the realm. But while he may love Leonor over all others, his lawful wife, Maria of Portugal, is tired of being constantly displaced by the fair Leonor.
Leonor loves her man. She gives him healthy sons, a place to be himself. But she is only a mistress, even if Alfonso treats her like a queen. Leonor’s enemies watch and hate.
Flying too close to the sun comes at a high price. How much will Leonor’s love cost her?
Based on the true story of Alfonso XI and his complicated relationships to wife and life-long mistress.
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