The Shadow Appears is the first of two books written by Burt Tyson. Before this, I have never read a novel of this subject matter. It’s a post Civil War novel and what makes it unique to me is that it is a heroic tale of a Confederate soldier. I only recall reading books in which the Union soldiers were the heroes and the southern Confederate soldiers were the enemy. Perhaps their soldier acts were done so with obvious bravery, but those actions were still being done by enemy forces. In this book, the protagonist is Captain Robert Hester, but rather than use his name, he asks the characters with whom he interacts as being just “Captain.” At the start of the story, the Captain is just being released from a Confederate hospital where he has been staying the last three months while covering from near fatal war injuries. The fall of the Confederacy was at hand, only weeks before Lee’s surrender at Appomattox, Virginia. The Captain was sent, along with his assistant, Sergeant Turley, to provide protection for Jefferson Davis, the president of the Confederacy. I should clarify that I have no doubt that there were as man Confederacy heroes as there were Union heroes, and I have no doubt that the union forces, under Mosely and Sherman, caused many outrageous atrocities on their rampage through the south at the end of the war.
On his way to find President Davis, the Captain did a brief detour to stop by his own farm from which he had been away for a few years in the war effort. As he arrived, he saw the house was in flames, and the farm was being destroyed by Stoneman’s “bummers” who were actually Union forces who had been presumably sent by Stoneman to do whatever damage they could inflict on the homes and farms of southerners. From a hilltop, he saw his father shot, his sister killed, and the woman he planned to marry killed. Although the odds were two against 19, in a rage, the Captain and Turley killed them all. After burying his own loved ones, he swore that when he was done with his assignment for Davis, that he would kill as many Yankees as he could find. Although the Captain never did catch up with Davis, in the process of trying to find him, he ran across numbers of “bummers” and against overwhelming numbers, killed all of them. Meanwhile, he provided great help to the people who survived the slaughter by northern troops. Time and again, the Captain was told he was a great man who seemed to have divine protection.
Even after Appomattox, when other southerners were conceding victory by the Union, the Captain continued his intent to kill Yankees. He and Turley continued west and landed in Texas where he encountered yet more bad guys who he killed. Despite getting more serious wounds, he spared a village which was about to be attacked by Ramon Herrerra. It was Herrerra who would be called the Shadow for his evil actions towards anyone who disagreed with him. Ramon was described as follows, “He is like the shadow before el Diablo, first you see the shadow and then you see el Diablo. Perhaps we should call him La Sombre del Diablo, the Devil’s Shadow.” It was Ramon Herrerra who is bound to become the villain in the second novel by Tyson, The Shadow Appears.
I can see how this material would appeal to many, but it’s a bit too worshipful of the Captain who is a murderous force in his own right. The dialogue was quite repetitive regarding the remarkable battle skills and generosity of the Captain. Although I did finish this story, I don’t have a plan to read the second novel in the series.
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