Wednesday, November 13, 2019

Nathan Bedford Forrest: The Hero in Fiction

 

A review of None Shall Look Back (J.S. Sanders, 1992) by Caroline Gordon

Thus far the War Between the States has failed to produce an epic like The Iliad, a narrative account of the four-year conflict that would include the exploits of all the heroes of both sides. In fact, few Southern novelists have written fictional accounts of Confederate warriors— possibly because not enough time has elapsed, possibly because there are many good histories and biographies that perform the chief function of the epic—to help a people remember their heroic past.

However, a few genuine literary talents have attempted to create epic portraits of Confederate heroes, and one of the best of these is Caroline Gordon, a novelist whose literary works are only now, after a half century, beginning to win the attention they’ve always deserved. Her portrayal of Nathan Bedford Forrest in None Shall Look Back, recently reissued by J.S. Sanders, Inc., should be read by every student of Confederate history, not merely because it accurately portrays the ebb and flow of battle, but also because it defines the crucial role of the military hero in a time when a nation and its people are in jeopardy.

4 comments:

  1. We need a Nathan Bedford Forrest today. I would serve under him.

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  2. Yes, we need men like him.

    "A government that fears arms in the hands of its People should also fear the rope."
    --Gen Nathan Bedford Forrest

    And unlike Lincoln and other racists of his time, he said of the reported appro a hundred free black men in his regiment, "finer Confederates never fought."

    --Ron W

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