A Moment In The Sun
Saturday, June 25, 2011 at 2:39AM
Nicholas Monsour in A Moment In The Sun, Colonialism, John Sayles, Literature, State Terrorism
 
A Moment In The Sun
by John Sayles
McSweeney's, 935 pages
"Spanning five years and half a dozen countries, A Moment in the Sun takes the whole era in its sights—from the white-racist coup in Wilmington, North Carolina, to the first stirrings of the motion-picture industry, to the bloody dawn of U.S. interventionism in Cuba and the Philippines. The result of years of writing and research, the book is built on the voices of a breathtaking range of men and women—Hod Brackenridge, a gold-chaser turned Army recruit; Royal Scott, an African American infantryman whose life outside the military has been destroyed; Diosdado Concepcíon, a Filipino insurgent preparing to fight against his country’s new colonizers; and more than a dozen others, Mark Twain, Damon Runyon, and President William McKinley’s assassin among them. Shot through with a lyrical intensity and stunning detail that recall Doctorow and Deadwood both, this is a story as big as its subject: history rediscovered through the lives of the people who made it happen."
Article originally appeared on NICHOLAS MONSOUR (http://nicholasmonsour.squarespace.com/).
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