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Jamie MacGillivray

The Renegade's Journey

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
A New York Times Book Review Editor's Choice
'It gets under the skin of this extraordinary time in a way that few historical novels do. Sayles writes superbly about the confusion of warfare and deals equally well with the horrors of the plantations...This is a first-rate historical novel told with wit, verve and a subtle understanding of the mechanics of the genre.' - The New York Times Book Review
"John Sayles is a living master." - Jennifer Haigh, author of Faith
Spanning 13 years, two continents, several wars, and many smoke-filled and bloody battlefields, John Sayles’s thrilling historical and cinematic epic invites comparison with Diana Gabaldon, George R. R. Martin, Phillippa Gregory, and Charles Dickens.

It begins in the highlands of Scotland in 1746, at the Battle of Culloden, the last desperate stand of the Stuart ‘pretender’ to the throne of the Three Kingdoms, Bonnie Prince Charlie, and his rabidly loyal supporters.  Vanquished with his comrades by the forces of the Hanoverian (and Protestant) British crown, the novel’s eponymous hero, Jamie MacGillivray, narrowly escapes a roadside execution only to be recaptured by the victors and shipped to Marshalsea Prison (central to Charles Dickens’s Hard Times) where he cheats the hangman a second time before being sentenced to transportation and indentured servitude in colonial America "for the term of his natural life."  His travels are paralleled by those of Jenny Ferguson, a poor, village girl swept up on false charges by the English and also sent in chains to the New World.
The novel follows Jamie and Jenny through servitude, revolt, escape, and romantic entanglements — pawns in a deadly game.  The two continue to cross paths with each other and with some of the leading figures of the era- the devious Lord Lovat, future novelist Henry Fielding, the artist William Hogarth, a young and ambitious George Washington, the doomed General James Wolfe, and the Lenape chief feared throughout the Ohio Valley as Shingas the Terrible.
A DELUXE EDITION with a brilliant design.
700 PAGES of a thrilling, historical, and cinematic epic!
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 31, 2022
      Film director and novelist Sayles (Yellow Earth) follows in this strong outing the parallel stories of a Scottish rebel and a young Scottish woman pressed into servitude and sent to the Caribbean. The author opens with the 1745 Battle of Culloden. On one side, there’s “pretender” Bonnie Prince Charlie and his motley army of Highlanders, Irish, Scots, and English deserters. They face off with the infamous Duke of Cumberland and his government forces. Jamie MacGillivray of Dunmaglas—rebel to the core—is captured by the redcoats, imprisoned in a squalid London jail, and transported to Maryland to clear land for his master under the gaze of a man enslaved from Africa. Meanwhile, Jenny Ferguson winds up in the Caribbean after she was falsely accused of helping the rebels, where she’s forced to work as a cook. She eventually learns French and makes her way to Quebec, where Sayles sets more exciting battle scenes. Though Sayles’s efforts at phonetic Scottish diction sometimes sound a bit hackneyed, he has a knack for bringing his many characters to life, and he makes palpable the raw violence of war and the uncompromising inequality of the period. It’s a worthy epic.

    • Booklist

      January 1, 2023
      Acclaimed screenwriter, director, and novelist Sayles (Yellow Earth, 2020) blends his wide-ranging narrative skills to great effect in this sprawling historical epic. We meet Jamie MacGillivray at the ill-fated 1746 Battle of Culloden, the Jacobite rebellion of Bonnie Prince Charlie Stuart that was summarily quashed by the crown and at which our hero is left for dead. Jamie is sent to prison, escapes the hangman, and is subsequently sentenced to indentured servitude in America. This broad canvas plays to Sayles' considerable strengths, alternating between a wide cinematic lens and the more intimate portraiture of the charismatic MacGillivray. The dialogue is presented in a thick Scottish brogue that takes some getting used to and benefits from being read aloud and, ultimately, proves to be an ideal vehicle for the pithy banter and caustic wit of the rebel class. Jamie's story line runs parallel to that of Jenny Ferguson, a Dickensian figure similarly sent to colonial America and equally adept at staying on this side of the grave. Sayles' grand vision yields a rollicking yarn that will satisfy the discerning historical adventure reader.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      A Scotsman on the wrong side of history is thrust into the New World. The title hero of this baggy epic by filmmaker/novelist Sayles is a Jacobite on a futile quest to unseat King George II. After his cohort's bloody defeat at the Battle of Culloden in 1746, he's captured by British soldiers, imprisoned, then shipped across the Atlantic and pressed into indentured servitude in Maryland. Meanwhile, Jenny, a farm girl with whom Jamie had a chance encounter during the battle, is similarly taken captive by a French regiment and sent to the island of Martinique. Sayles braids Jamie's and Jenny's storylines across more than a decade, culminating in their involvement in the French and Indian War. Along the way, Sayles is expert at describing the tactical elements of the battles (George Washington, then a Virginia regiment commander, plays a minor but key role) and deftly captures the dialects of his characters and the violence they're subjected to. But Sayles' chief interest is in how time, place, war, and imperialism at once do violence on bodies and identities. Jamie becomes embedded with the Lenape tribe seeking independence from colonizers, earning the name Long Knife; Jenny, for her part, becomes an eyewitness to the slave trade and seeks her own form of independence. Jamie, denied a sense of home on two continents, exemplifies the discontent that sparked the American Revolution, and Sayles underscores the Native Americans' disenfranchisement as well. ("If we are not to live on this land...why would we die for it?" one tribal leader says.) Sayles' style is immersive to a fault, often dragging readers into details of war tactics and walk-on characters, muffling the strength of the story's two leads. But Sayles makes clear the kind of bigotry and greed they're fighting against. An admirably ambitious if overly upholstered historical yarn.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)

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