The madstone A novel

Elizabeth Crook, 1959-

Book - 2023

"Texas hill country, 1868. As nineteen-year-old Benjamin Shreve tends to business in his workshop, he witnesses a stagecoach strand a passenger. When the man, a treasure hunter, persuades Benjamin to help track down the vanished coach--and a mysterious fortune left aboard--Benjamin is drawn into a drama whose scope he could never have imagined, for they discover on reaching the coach that its passengers include Nell, a pregnant young woman, and her four-year-old son, Tot, who are fleeing Nell's brutal husband and his murderous brothers. Having told the Freedmen's Bureau the whereabouts of her husband's gang--a sadistic group wanted for countless acts of harassment and violence against Black citizens--Nell is in grave dan...ger. If her husband catches her, he will kill her and take their son. Learning of their plight, Benjamin offers to deliver Nell and Tot to a distant port on the Gulf of Mexico, where they can board a ship to safety. He is joined in this chivalrous act by two other companions: the treasure hunter whose stranding began this endeavor and a restless Black Seminole who is a veteran of wars on both sides of the Rio Grande and who has an escape plan of his own.​ Fraught with jeopardy from the outset, the trek across Texas becomes still more dangerous as buried secrets, including a cursed necklace, emerge. And even as Benjamin falls in love with Nell and imagines a life as Tot's father, vengeful pursuers are never far behind. With its vivid characters and expansive canvas, The Madstone calls to mind Lonesome Dove, yet Elizabeth Crook's new novel is a singular achievement. Told in Benjamin's resolute and unforgettable voice, it is full of eccentric action, unrelenting peril, and droll humor--a thrilling and beautifully rendered story of three people sharing a hazardous and defining journey that will forever bind them together"--

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Subjects
Genres
Novels
Western fiction
Action and adventure fiction
Historical fiction
Published
New York : Little, Brown and Company 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Elizabeth Crook, 1959- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
279 pages ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 273-275).
ISBN
9780316564342
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Crook's (The Which Way Tree, 2018) sixth novel is told in letters written by Benjamin Shreve, a nineteen-year-old carpenter living in Comfort, Texas, to another character for review on his nineteenth birthday years in the future. Written in Shreve's phonetic, Hill Country drawl, the book follows a Texas map southeast from Comfort, where Shreve agrees to transport Dickie Bell to a distant stagecoach station to catch a steamer to New Orleans. The duo later take on Nell, a pregnant woman, and her young son, Henry (also known as Small Tot and the future recipient of the letters), who are trying to outrun Nell's husband. After a mangy coyote bites Small Tot, the group grows to include Horhay Elveraz, a self-described Negro Seminoll who saves the boy with his madstone. Though the success of the group's venture is never in doubt, Crook finishes the novel with the only blow that could force Shreve's emotional growth. Given the setting, the journey, and the implied romance, this epistolary novel will appeal to western and historical-fiction readers alike (particularly Lone Star aficionados).

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Crook (The Which Way Tree) sets her underwhelming epistolary novel in 1868 Texas, where a young man gets in over his head after lending help to a group of strangers. The ordinary life of Benjamin Shreve, a Texas woodworker, is upended after he encounters a pregnant woman named Nell and her four-year-old son, Tot, on the run from her missing husband's brothers, a rageful bunch known as the Swamp Fox gang. (They claim Nell murdered her husband, while she maintains he abandoned her in poverty after the Civil War.) Crook's narrative is framed as a letter from Benjamin to Tot, recounting the treacherous journey Benjamin takes to escort mother and son to safety along with their fellow stagecoach passenger, Dickie. As the unlikely comrades attempt to reach the Louisiana border, Dickie claims to have unearthed a cursed necklace that may carry misfortune to whoever possesses it, and Benjamin falls in love with Nell. While this has the exciting and fast-paced plot of a serviceable western, there's nothing special in Benjamin's voice. "Reckoning offers more peace to the heart, as it has an end," he claims in his letter, but his curious lack of intimacy and distance from the story's tense events leave little evidence of such a reckoning on the page. Readers will have a tough time seeing this one through to the end. Agent: Gail Hochman, Brandt & Hochman Literary. (Nov.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A spirited tale of the Old West, with outlaws, jewels, and a few good guys. Crook brings back the likable narrator of her last novel, The Which Way Tree (2018). It's two years later, around 1868, and 19-year-old Ben Shreve is working as a carpenter in Comfort, Texas, north of San Antonio. He's still wondering about his half sister, Sam, who took off in the previous book to hunt down the panther that scarred her and killed her mother. Through an outhouse misunderstanding, Ben winds up sharing his wagon with a treasure hunter named Dickie Bell who has found some unusual jewelry and needs a lift to the gulf town of Indianola. They pick up a man whose horse was stolen by highway robbers, "imposter Indians...dressed up like chiefs," and who refuses to tell them his name. Down the road a piece, the stranger is shot to death by a young pregnant woman whose stagecoach was being attacked by the same imposters who hijacked the unnamed man, who were then interrupted by a different group of bandits. Nell and her 4-year-old son, Tot, continue with Ben and Dickie. Why she shot the man has to do with marital discord and a vicious outlaw taken from Texas history named Cullen Baker, a.k.a. the Swamp Fox, some of whose men are pursuing Tot. Other perils include a rabid coyote and a rattlesnake. Certain threats may lose their sting because some survivors are obvious, given that the story is told in the form of a long letter from Ben to Tot. As in the last novel, Crook notes Ben's knowledge of Moby-Dick, but the guiding spirit here feels more like Dickens than Melville. Crook has a gift for engaging details, such as the simple comfort, to a young carpenter raised poor, of a room with a bed and chair and "a nicely carved chest of drawers, with a washbowl atop it, and a small rug alongside the bed." An entertaining, well-paced yarn, and a sequel that suggests another installment. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.