About this item
Highlights
- Assigned as a nurse to a hospital ship during the Civil War, Dr. Rose Barnett hopes someone will apprentice her in the modern art of surgery.
- Author(s): Joyce Cherry Cresswell
- 306 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, LGBT
Description
About the Book
Assigned as a nurse to a hospital ship during the Civil War, Dr. Rose Barnett hopes someone will apprentice her in the modern art of surgery. But she has more to learn than how to amputate the ruined limbs of Union soldiers.Book Synopsis
Assigned as a nurse to a hospital ship during the Civil War, Dr. Rose Barnett hopes someone will apprentice her in the modern art of surgery. But she has more to learn than how to amputate the ruined limbs of Union soldiers. Confronted by her own preconceived notions of class, love, and race, she struggles to untangle life's persistent contradictions. As a pacifist, her greatest challenge is coming to grips with the terrible ironies of war. As a woman, she must learn to follow her heart. Based on the true story of a woman doctor in the American Civil War, A Great Length of Time is a woman's view of the politics and gender roles of the day, offering a fresh look at the war and the women who nursed its soldiers.
Review Quotes
This is the Civil War as we have never seen it, drenched in the heat and blood and smells of the hospital ship Despain, where the lone woman surgeon Rose Barnett - bright, determined, unshrinking, standing her ground in a man's world - labors to salvage the destroyed bodies of young soldiers. Profoundly moving, vivid and authentic, unflinching, absolutely convincing in voice and imagery, this is a remarkable book, and I won't soon forget it. -Molly Gloss, author of "Hearts of Horses" A special pleasure of this powerful tale lies in the language and brutal images of Civil War medicine. Meanwhile, the national shame of slavery ever simmers about the characters as they play their public roles and confront their private secrets. The result is an engrossing slice of American history and a new vision of our past. Joyce Cherry Cresswell's language is ever lush, and convincingly evocative of the period. Just now, as our country finds itself in another kind of civil war, the entire tale resonates with truths we need to hear. In this sense, Cresswell sits in close company with the works of Lepore, Kearns Goodwin and McCullough. -Roger Paget, Institutional Professor Emeritus, Lewis and Clark College