BOOK REVIEW
The Hessian by Howard Fast (1972)
American novelist Howard Fast is a wonderful storyteller. Like Jeffrey Archer across the Atlantic. Many of their books, especially Fast's, have historical and biblical significance; their stories are plain and simple, yet compelling; their narrative and substance is devoid of hyperbole; and their characters are extraordinary in an ordinary sort of way.
If I go any further, I’ll have to sound a spoiler alert.
Notable lines from the book
The Hessian by Howard Fast (1972)
American novelist Howard Fast is a wonderful storyteller. Like Jeffrey Archer across the Atlantic. Many of their books, especially Fast's, have historical and biblical significance; their stories are plain and simple, yet compelling; their narrative and substance is devoid of hyperbole; and their characters are extraordinary in an ordinary sort of way.
Howard Fast died in 2003 but I refer to him in present tense because of his impressive
body of work comprising some 50-odd novels that include the Masao Masuto Mysteries under the E.V. Cunningham pseudonym
and a few works of non-fiction and short stories. I haven't read many yet.
I read Howard Fast
books many years ago and, I think, The
Hessian is his first book I
read this century. It turned out to be an educative and entertaining read, a
fictional account of what might have been a factual event.
Author Howard Fast © Wikimedia Commons |
The Hessian is set during the American Revolutionary War or the
American War of Independence in the second half of the 18thcentury.
The Hessians were German soldiers hired by the King of England to fight against
the 13 colonies that revolted against Great Britain ’s
rule. The Hessians were so called because a majority of the soldiers came from
the Hesse region of Germany . They
were called “mercenaries” by the American colonists.
The Hessians wore
boots and shining black hats and green jackets with bright yellow facings,
sported waxed moustaches, and carried bayonet scabbards that slapped against
their thighs. The sight of the Hessians, as they marched in tandem with the
beat of drums, sent chills down the spines of their opponents.
The story in The Hessian is narrated in the first person by
Doctor Evan Feversham, a colonel in the Continental Army (a precursor to the
United States Army) during the American Revolution. He is a Catholic from England and married to a Protestant
woman. He lives with her community and practices medicine on the Ridge in Connecticut ,
in the New
England region.
A detachment of 16
Hessians preceded by a youthful drummer boy named Hans Pohl and their commander
Wolfgang Hauser disembarks from a British frigate and marches towards the
Ridge. They belong to the Jäger Regiment, a German light infantry unit.
Hessian soldiers © Wikimedia Commons |
As the troops make
their way towards the Ridge, they meet Saul Clamberham, an orphaned and
oversized halfwit, and hang him to a tree. The lynching is witnessed by Jacob,
the 12-year old son of farmer Raymond Heather, a Quaker, who lives on the Ridge
with his family.
The news of Saul
Clamberham’s killing spreads through the Ridge. In no time Squire Abraham Hunt,
the rigid and influential Yankee aristocrat and chief of the local militia, leads
a band of armed men in ambush of the Hessians and kills them in cold blood, even
as Doctor Feversham, his medical kit in hand, watches in horror and helplessness.
In the mayhem, Hans
Pohl, the drummer boy, is seriously wounded but manages to escape and is
eventually sheltered by Raymond Heather’s courageous and compassionate Quaker
family which, apart from his son Jacob, includes his wife Sarah and 16-year old
daughter Sally.
As Doctor Feversham
treats and heals the drummer boy, he realises the enormous sacrifices made by
the Quaker family in protecting Hans Pohl, the surviving Hessian. He is nursed
back to health by Sally who falls in love with him. This is their story.
Meanwhile, Squire
Hunt, who has certain differences with Doctor Feversham, is desperately hunting
for the drummer boy so they can try him for murder of Saul Clamberham and hang
him. The Squire and the small New England community
he represents believe in an eye for an eye and tooth for a tooth because they
know no other way in war. Theirs is a land without mercy.
This period image shows Hessian soldiers as
heartless warriors. © www.ushistory.org |
While the hunt for the sole survivor of the brutal Hessian massacre on one hand and a beautiful girl’s love for the drummer boy on the other form the main plot of The Hessian, there are several elements in the story that I found interesting.
For example, narrator
Doctor Feversham has seen the worst of war and he is in a perennial state of
mental conflict over what is right and what is wrong, frequently brooding over
the “desolate wasteland” of his life and the “meaningless fragment” he has
become on the Ridge. The Heather family’s kind attitude towards Hans Pohl and
their willingness to take him as their own reveals to him the goodness in
people, in this case the Quakers on the Ridge.
Feversham, a Catholic,
is unable to come to terms with the Protestant community’s hunger for Hans Pohl’s
blood even as his wife Alice tries to clear his misgivings by stating, “We are not barbarians, Evan, we
are plain Christian people who were persecuted and driven for a hundred years
before we came to this land.” A bitter Doctor Feversham remains unconvinced.
Squire Abraham Hunt is
determined to hang the surviving Hessian even as he battles his conscience,
indicated subtly in the overall narrative.
Doctor Feversham’s
unspoken and undeclared love for Sarah Heather adds to his emotional conflict
but he remains loyal to his American wife, Alice, who knows he continues to
harbour feelings for the Quaker woman.
At 219 pages, The Hessian is a poignant and compelling story but
it lacks the intensity, particularly the avowed passion between Hans Pohl and
Sally Heather, which one might expect at the start of the book. Instead, the
narrative focuses more on Doctor Feversham’s inner battles that rage in the
backdrop of a war that has thought man to hate and to kill. Although the story
moves at a fairly dramatic pace, you can guess the events as they unfold right
up to the end. Nonetheless, Howard Fast has written The Hessian in his inimitable
style, a unique historical story told in a beautiful way.
Notable lines from the book
“Believe me, there are
no better soldiers in the King’s army than the Hessians and it was no great
risk for them to come up onto the Ridge with sixteen muskets.”
“God damn that,” I
cried. “Every soldier who set foot from a ship onto our soil killed for
hire—Hessian, British, French, Scot! What damn difference does it make? They
all kill for hire! This whole filthy game is played for hire! I’m only asking
you not to make us like them, to show some Christian mercy!”
“No one in his right
mind wants war in his back yard, and since the war was down in Virginia now, only a damn fool would take
measures to introduce it into Connecticut .”
“What eats you,
Feversham? You were a soldier, I was a soldier. When we fought the big battle
on the other side of the Ridgefield , there were
ten times that many dead, and not Germans either but our own kids. You want me
to weep for them?”
This is a very interesting and detailed review, Prashant. And timely for me. There is an American Revolution Reading Challenge at War Through the Generations (http://warthroughthegenerations.wordpress.com/2013-challenge-info-and-sign-up/) that I was interested in but had no knowledge of any books (fiction) set in that time that I would read. Regardless, I will try this book or another non-mystery by Fast. Thanks for the review.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Tracy. One thing I forgot to mention is that Howard Fast's writing style may not be to everyone's liking because of their often slow and leisurely pace. His books are entertaining, nonetheless, and you learn something along the way. The "American Revolution Reading Challenge at War Through the Generations" sounds fascinating and I hope you come across books set in that period. There are many though, offhand, I can't recall any fictional titles. There are hundreds in the non-fiction category.
DeleteOh, I can pick this up next week, Prashant.
ReplyDeletePatti, I find variety in Howard Fast's 50-plus books and I'm planning to read a few more titles that I've marked out.
DeleteThis is a great ttribute to Fast Prashant - and I've not read this one, so that's a bonus too as I shall seek it out.
ReplyDeleteThanks very much, Sergio. I remember I used to enjoy reading his books, especially the sequential The IMMIGRANTS, SECOND GENERATION, and THE ESTABLISHMENT. They were all well-written novels. I'm glad I've rediscovered Howard Fast's books.
DeleteI've read some of Fast's work and enjoyed it. He could write a good story.
ReplyDeleteCharles, he sure could and I'm hunting for more of his books.
DeleteI like Fast's work a lot...though his sf could be weak, his historical fiction was pretty consistently wonderful. Surprised you've compared him with Archer, who is not so much loved in a lot of circles (I haven't gotten around to his work).
ReplyDeleteTodd, I compared Howard Fast to Jeffrey Archer with regard to their storytelling style where I found a lot of similarities. I didn't know Fast had also written sf.
DeleteHoward Fast also wrote the Masao Masuto Mysteries
ReplyDeleteas "E.V. Cunningham" which are worth reading, too.
George, I haven't read Fast's work under the E.V. Cunningham pseudonym though I'm familiar with the the Masao Masuto Mysteries.
Delete