THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 2019 // 19 BOOKMONGER FAMILY-BASED NOVEL SEEKS ATONEMENT, FINDS WAR On a whirlwind trip to New York last week, I shoe- horned in a visit to Ulysses S. Grant’s Tomb, on Manhat- tan’s Upper West Side. The formidable monu- ment was decked out in bunting to mark the pass- ing in late July, 134 years ago, of the man who led the Union Army to victory over the Confeder- acy in the Civil War, and later was elected president. The visit to the monument had spe- cial resonance for me because I was in the midst of read- ing “No Common War,” a novel about a pro-Union family that became embroiled in the Civil War. Author Luke Salis- bury bases his story on events from his own fam- ily history. The book cover features a photo- graph of one of his ances- tors. Sgt. Moreau J. Salis- bury “saw the elephant” (engaged in combat) mul- tiple times during the Civil War. Moreau fi gures as one of this novel’s principal fi gures, as do his father, Mason Salis- bury, and his cousin, Merrick Salisbury. The opening pages indicate that these men come from a fam- ily with roots in early colonial history, and that their forebears helped to instigate King Philip’s War, which is considered to be the bloodiest war, per capita, in Amer- ican history. This lurid family narrative has always haunted young Moreau, who wishes to pur- sue a life of penance in the seminary. But it is the early 1860s, and with Lincoln’s elec- tion, the Union is break- ing up. Mason Salisbury is impatient for his son to man up and go off to fi ght against those who are claiming the right to own slaves. When Moreau resists, Mason goads his son into action by staging an encounter with a run- away slave. The scheme bears fruit: when Moreau comes face to face with someone who has suffered life- long enslavement, and now is risk- ing his life to fl ee, the empa- thetic young man at last is motivated to go off and fi ght for the cause. Moreau and his cousin Mer- rick are given a heady send- off by the commu- nity. One young woman, Helen, is so stirred by Moreau’s courage that in the excite- ment of the moment she promises her faithful love for him. The cousins head to Washington City. At fi rst, they see little action, but are witness to the rough conditions in the nation’s capital. THIS WEEK’S BOOK “No Common War” By Luke Salisbury Black Heron Press – 312 pp – $27.99 But by the summer of 1862, things heat up, and they are thrust into a series of battles, fi nally arriving at Antietam that September. The fi ght that ensues is the deadliest one- day battle in American history, and both cousins are gravely wounded. When the family back home hears the news, the fathers of Moreau and Merrick set out to retrieve their sons. “No Common War” is provocative and tough. This is a story of values, valor and the fl aws of fathers. It graphically describes battlefi eld violence, and probes the trauma that can be perpetuated through generations. As one character asks, “What do we owe the dead?” The Bookmonger is Barbara Lloyd McMichael, who writes this weekly column focusing on the books, authors and publishers of the Pacifi c Northwest. Contact her at bkmonger@nwlink.com