Jiles’ sparse but lyrical writing is a joy to read. . . . A beautifully written book and a worthy follow-up to News of the World .
Endearing . . . And when the final battle royal arrives in San Antonio, it’s just the rousing ballad we want to hear.
"[Jiles's] description of Simon and Doris traveling on separate journeys across the Texas landscape is superb, causing us to feel the elation and sense of possibility that rises in the hearts of man, woman and beast in setting out on the road.
Luminescent prose. . . . Jiles’ timeworn territory provides a cozy escape.
02/17/2020
Jiles’s gritty and richly atmospheric seventh novel returns to the post–Civil War Texas she explored in News of the World . In the last year of the war, 23-year-old Simon Boudlin, an orphan musician from Kentucky who has avoided a stint in the Confederate Army, is rounded up by a couple of conscription men. After the war concludes, his body and fiddle still relatively intact, Simon and some friends are commissioned to play for a formal dinner for Confederate and Union officers at Fort Brown, Tex. There he is dazzled by Doris Dillon, the Irish governess for Colonel Webb of the Union Army, and determines that he will somehow buy some land and make her his bride. Simon and Doris trade letters over the next couple of years as he and his friends become “creatures of gaslight and shadows,” traveling around coastal Texas for stray saloon gigs, and Doris works off her indentured servitude for the Webbs in San Antonio and fends off unwelcome advances from the colonel. When Simon finally makes his way to Doris, trouble ensues. Jiles immerses the reader in the sensory details of the era, with special emphasis on the demands and rewards of a ragtag Texas fiddle band. Jiles’s limber tale satisfies with welcome splashes of comedy and romance. (Apr.)
The reader is treated to a kind of alchemy on the page when character, setting and song converge at all the right notes, generating an authentic humanity that is worth remembering and celebrating.” — New York Times
“Jiles’ sparse but lyrical writing is a joy to read. . . . A beautifully written book and a worthy follow-up to News of the World .” — Associated Press
“Imbued with the dust, grit, and grime of Galveston at the close of the Civil War, Simon the Fiddler immerses readers in the challenges of Reconstruction. Jiles brings her singular voice to the young couple's travails, her written word as lyrical and musical as Simon's bow raking over his strings. Loyal Jiles readers and fans of Anthony Doerr's All the Light We Cannot See and Elizabeth Strout's Olive Kitteridge will adore the author's latest masterpiece." — Booklist (starred review)
“Luminescent prose. . . . Jiles’ timeworn territory provides a cozy escape. — Los Angeles Times
“Endearing . . . And when the final battle royal arrives in San Antonio, it’s just the rousing ballad we want to hear.” — Washington Post
“Jiles’s limber tale satisfies with welcome splashes of comedy and romance.” — Publishers Weekly
“Vividly evocative and steeped in American folkways: more great work from a master storyteller.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“In Simon the Fiddler we once again accompany a cast of intriguing characters on a suspenseful Texas-based quest just after the Civil War. . . . A crackling-good adventure tale.” — Minneapolis Star Tribune
"[Jiles's] description of Simon and Doris traveling on separate journeys across the Texas landscape is superb, causing us to feel the elation and sense of possibility that rises in the hearts of man, woman and beast in setting out on the road.” — Wall Street Journal
“Beautifully told with lyrical descriptions, the novel illuminates the everyday struggles of the era.” — Christian Science Monitor
“Jiles makes Texas in the 1800s hot and palpable for her readers, edgy and lawless, but the story also sings with melody.” — Book Trib
Beautifully told with lyrical descriptions, the novel illuminates the everyday struggles of the era.
Christian Science Monitor
The reader is treated to a kind of alchemy on the page when character, setting and song converge at all the right notes, generating an authentic humanity that is worth remembering and celebrating.”
Luminescent prose. . . . Jiles’ timeworn territory provides a cozy escape.
In Simon the Fiddler we once again accompany a cast of intriguing characters on a suspenseful Texas-based quest just after the Civil War. . . . A crackling-good adventure tale.
Endearing . . . And when the final battle royal arrives in San Antonio, it’s just the rousing ballad we want to hear.
Imbued with the dust, grit, and grime of Galveston at the close of the Civil War, Simon the Fiddler immerses readers in the challenges of Reconstruction. Jiles brings her singular voice to the young couple's travails, her written word as lyrical and musical as Simon's bow raking over his strings. Loyal Jiles readers and fans of Anthony Doerr's All the Light We Cannot See and Elizabeth Strout's Olive Kitteridge will adore the author's latest masterpiece."
Booklist (starred review)
Jiles makes Texas in the 1800s hot and palpable for her readers, edgy and lawless, but the story also sings with melody.”
Imbued with the dust, grit, and grime of Galveston at the close of the Civil War, Simon the Fiddler immerses readers in the challenges of Reconstruction. Jiles brings her singular voice to the young couple's travails, her written word as lyrical and musical as Simon's bow raking over his strings. Loyal Jiles readers and fans of Anthony Doerr's All the Light We Cannot See and Elizabeth Strout's Olive Kitteridge will adore the author's latest masterpiece."
Booklist (starred review)
Narrator Grover Gardner and poet-novelist Paulette Jiles are a dazzling combination. This accomplished picaresque novel is set in post-Civil War Texas, a place and time Jiles owns. It’s historical fiction of the highest order, transporting the listener to a distant culture and making it both exotic and piercingly familiar. Her tale is in a period style, the story of a rough-cut young hero making his way in a lawless world with talent and a courageous heart. Gardner brings excitement and experience to creating the sounds and voices of Simon’s world as he strives against liars, grifters, and bullies to win freedom and love with an indentured immigrant girl. Pairing high-voltage adventure with passages of exquisitely beautiful writing, Gardner and Jiles leave you cheering. B.G. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2020, Portland, Maine
FEBRUARY 2020 - AudioFile
Narrator Grover Gardner and poet-novelist Paulette Jiles are a dazzling combination. This accomplished picaresque novel is set in post-Civil War Texas, a place and time Jiles owns. It’s historical fiction of the highest order, transporting the listener to a distant culture and making it both exotic and piercingly familiar. Her tale is in a period style, the story of a rough-cut young hero making his way in a lawless world with talent and a courageous heart. Gardner brings excitement and experience to creating the sounds and voices of Simon’s world as he strives against liars, grifters, and bullies to win freedom and love with an indentured immigrant girl. Pairing high-voltage adventure with passages of exquisitely beautiful writing, Gardner and Jiles leave you cheering. B.G. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2020, Portland, Maine
FEBRUARY 2020 - AudioFile
★ 2020-01-13 Jiles follows up National Book Award finalist News of the World (2016, etc.) with another atmospheric adventure in post-Civil War Texas.
During his few reluctant months in the Confederate Army, Simon Boudlin's main concerns are staying alive and protecting his precious fiddle so that after the war he can make enough money to buy some land and settle down with the right woman. He sees her after his unit surrenders, at a dinner for the officers: Doris Dillon is an Irish indentured servant to Yankee Col. Webb, and by the time Simon learns her name he already knows that Webb is an arrogant SOB who mistreats the help and is nasty to musicians. That's the last Simon sees of Doris for more than a year, as he forms a band with fellow veterans (three of the novel's many deft characterizations) and they play their way across Texas, technically under military rule but mostly in a state of near anarchy; the musicians' gigs, brilliantly captured in Jiles' quiet but resonant prose, are as likely to end in a brawl as with applause. Simon and his mates bunk down in stolen boats and shelled-out buildings that make visible the cost of war, but magnificent descriptions of their travels make palpable the varied beauty of the landscape, from East Texas pines to the banks of the Nueces River, where Simon plays at a wild Tejano wedding and finally has enough money to buy his dreamed-of land. He's been in touch with Doris via letters supposedly from his Irish-American drummer, Patrick, who helpfully invents some shared relatives, and is making his way toward San Antonio to rescue his beloved, who's finding it increasingly difficult to evade Webb's determined advances. The pace picks up and tension rises after Simon reaches San Antonio; there are some menacing moments, but clever plotting has laid the groundwork for a happy ending with just enough hints of potential troubles ahead to remain true to Jiles' loving but cleareyed portrait of Texas' vibrant, violent frontier culture.
Vividly evocative and steeped in American folkways: more great work from a master storyteller.