
Making brilliant use of a little-known chapter in America's history,
Wascom's gripping debut captures the pioneer spirit, lawlessness, and
religious fervor of the Southern frontier. In the Louisiana Territory in
1799, teenaged Angel Woolsack and his abusive, hellfire-preaching
father encounter their equals: preacher Deacon Kemper and his sons.
Deacon also deals in guns. Angel becomes blood brother to Samuel Kemper
and the two elude their fathers and flee to Natchez, where they
alternate between preaching and armed robbery. "I believed crime was
spiritual, robbery an act of faith.... In the process, both parties were
brought close to God, " Angel says. Eventually they reach the
Spanish-owned region known as West Florida, where Angel continues to
engage in mayhem and the murder of agents of the law. In time the
brothers become involved in Aaron Burr's treacherous attempt to create
an autonomous empire in Louisiana and Mexico. Angel is a hugely flawed
hero, mixing biblical cadences with a Southern lilt, and pulsing with
violence, religious hysteria, and sexual tension. Weaned on biblical
prophecy and an angry deity, he's unable to resist taking vengeance upon
those who oppose him, believing his behavior to be God's will, and
Wascom's visceral descriptions of slaughter are not for the
fainthearted. Yet Angel is also devoted to his pistol-packing bride, Red
Kate, and to his handicapped son, and the forces that shape his
character and destiny are clear. While Angel is fictional, the Kempers
were real figures, legendary for their ambition. In its depiction of a
primitive, savage era and of man's depravity, as well as its sensitive
portrayal of souls "drowned in the blood of Heaven, " Wascom's novel is a
masterly achievement.