Lincoln's Dreams: A Novel
Lincoln's Dreams: A Novel book cover

Lincoln's Dreams: A Novel

Mass Market Paperback – Unabridged, June 1, 1992

Price
$7.99
Publisher
Bantam Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0553270259
Dimensions
4.2 x 0.6 x 6.8 inches
Weight
4.5 ounces

Description

Connie Willis has won six Nebula and Six Hugo Awards (more than any other science fiction writer) and the John W. Campbell Memorial Award for her first novel, Lincoln's Dreams .xa0xa0Her novel Doomsday Book won both the Nebula and Hugo Awards, and her first short-story collection, Fire Watch , was a New York Times Notable Book.xa0xa0Her other works include Bellwether , Impossible Things , Remake , and Uncharted Territory. Ms.xa0xa0Willis lives in Greeley, Colorado, with her family. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. CHAPTER ONE xa0 They bred such horses in Virginia then, Horses that were remembered after death And buried not so far from Christian ground That if their sleeping riders should arise They could not witch them from the earth again And ride a printless course along the grass With the old manage and light ease of hand. xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0xa0 Stephen Vincent Benet xa0 Traveller died of lockjaw two years after Robert E. Lee died. I looked that up one day in February, the day I went out to see where Abraham Lincoln’s son Willie had been buried. I had been looking for the grave for over a year, and when I finally found it in a biography of Mary Todd Lincoln, I ran out of the library still carrying the book. It set off an alarm, and one of the librarians came out on the steps and shouted after me, “Jeff, are you all right? Jeff!” xa0 It was snowing hard that day, a wet spring snow. It took me nearly an hour to drive out to the old cemetery in Georgetown. I don’t know what I thought I’d find, some clue maybe to where Annie was and what had happened to her, some message that would tell me what had happened to all of them, Tom Tita and Ben and the rest of the soldiers who had died in the Civil War and were buried together under granite squares no larger than a scrap of paper. xa0 But there wasn’t anything there, not even Willie Lincoln’s body, and I went back to Broun’s house and got out Freeman’s four-volume biography of Lee and tried to find out what had happened to Traveller. xa0 As with everything else that had happened, there were both too many clues and not enough. But eventually I found out what I needed to know, the way I had found out where Willie had been, the way I had found out what was causing Annie’s dreams. After all, that was what I was good at, wasn’t it, looking up obscure facts? Traveller had lived two years. He had picked up a nail and gotten lockjaw. They had had to shoot him. xa0 I met Annie two years ago, the night of Broun’s press reception. The reception was supposed to be an advance publication party for Broun’s twelfth novel, The Duty Bound, with bound galleys passed out to the press, but there weren’t any galleys. There wasn’t even a finished book. xa0 The press reception had been scheduled for the last week in March, but at the end of February Broun was still fiddling with the copyedited manuscript, making changes and then changing the changes, and a week before the reception I was back in West Virginia, trying to find out exactly when Lee had bought Traveller. xa0 It was a detail that didn’t matter one way or the other to the book, since Lee had definitely been riding Traveller at Antietam in September of 1862, but it was the kind of thing Broun had been fussing over the entire book, and it worried me. xa0 He was having all kinds of trouble with The Duty Bound. He usually turned out his Civil War novels like clockwork: proposal to outline to manuscript to corrected galleys, which was why his publisher, McLaws and Herndon, had gone ahead and scheduled this reception before they had the copyedited manuscript back. xa0 I might have done the same thing. In the four years I’d been doing research for Broun, he’d never missed a deadline. But with The Duty Bound, he hadn’t made a deadline yet, and when I called him from West Virginia he was still making major changes. xa0 “I’m thinking of adding a chapter at the beginning of the book, Jeff,” he said. “To explain why Ben Freeman enlists.” xa0 “I thought you’d already sent the copyedited manuscript back,” I said. xa0 “I did, son. Three weeks ago. But then I got to worrying about Ben. He signs up just like that, for no reason. Would you do that?” xa0 “No, but a lot of recruits did. Listen, I’m calling because I’ve run into some trouble with Traveller. In a letter to one of his daughters, Lee says he bought Traveller in the fall of 1861, but the records here show he didn’t buy him until 1862, during the Carolina campaign.” xa0 “They must have had some reason for enlisting,” Broun said. “What if Ben’s courting a girl who’s in love with somebody else?” xa0 McLaws and Herndon would kill Broun if he started adding new characters at this late date. “I think the beginning’s fine,” I said. “Ben doesn’t have to have a good reason to sign up. Nobody else in the Civil War did. Most of the recruits couldn’t have told you what the war was even being fought about, let alone why they were in it. I’d go ahead and leave it as is, and that goes for Traveller, too. I’m going up to Lewisburg tomorrow to check the courthouse records, but I’m almost sure Lee didn’t buy the horse in 1861.” xa0 “Will you be home in time for the reception?” Broun asked. xa0 “I thought they’d postpone it since the book’s late.” xa0 “The invitations were already out. Try to get home for it, son. I need you here to explain why the book’s taking so long.” xa0 I wanted to ask him to explain it to me, but I didn’t. Instead, I chased all over Greenbrier County for three days, trying to find a scribbled note or a preliminary agreement that would settle the matter one way or the other, and then drove home through an awful snowstorm, but I made it in time for the reception. xa0 “You look like you’ve been through a campaign, son,” Broun said when I got there late in the afternoon. xa0 “I have,” I said, pulling off my parka. The snow had followed me all the way from White Sulphur Springs and then turned into icy rain fifty miles from D.C. I was glad Broun had a fire going in his upstairs study. “I found out what you wanted to know about Traveller.” xa0 “Good, good,” he said, taking books off a straight-backed chair and setting it in front of the fire. He draped my wet parka over the back of it. “I’m glad you’re home, Jeff. I think I’ve finally got a handle on the book. Did you know Lincoln dreamed about his own assassination?” xa0 “Yes,” I said, wondering what on earth this had to do with a novel about Antietam. “He dreamed he saw his dead body in the White House, didn’t he?” xa0 “He dreamed he woke up and heard the sound of crying,” Broun said, dumping his Siamese cat out of his big leather armchair and pulling it around to face the fire. He didn’t seem to be in any hurry, even though the reception was supposed to start at seven. He was wearing the ratty-looking gray cardigan he usually wrote in and a pair of baggy pants, and he apparently hadn’t shaved since I’d left. Maybe they’d canceled the reception after all. xa0 Broun motioned me to sit down. “When he went downstairs he couldn’t see anyone,” he went on, “but there was a corpse lying in a coffin in the East Room. The corpse’s face was covered by a black cloth, and Lincoln asked the guard standing at the door who was dead, and the guard answered, ‘The President. He was killed by an assassin.’xa0” xa0 He was looking at me eagerly, waiting for me to say something, but I didn’t have a clue of what that something was supposed to be. “He had the dream, what, a month before he died?” I said lamely. xa0 “Two weeks. April the second. I’d read it before, but while you were gone, McLaws and Herndon’s publicist called and asked me what book I was going to do after The Duty Bound. She needed it for the press release they’re going to pass out at the reception tonight, and I told her I didn’t know, but then I got to thinking about the Lincoln book.” xa0 The Lincoln book. That was what all this was about. I supposed I should be glad. If he got involved in a new book, maybe he’d quit messing with The Duty Bound. The only problem was that the Lincoln book wasn’t a new book. Broun called it his midlife crisis book, even though he hadn’t started it till he turned sixty. “I was afraid I’d die before I wrote anything important, and I still might. I never could get a handle on the damned thing,” he’d told me laughingly when I first came to work for him, but I suspected he was more than half serious. He’d tried working on it again a year later, but it still wasn’t much more than an outline. xa0 “Tomorrow I want you to go out to Arlington, Jeff.” He scratched at the grayish stubble on his cheek. “I need to know if Willie Lincoln was buried there.” xa0 “He’s buried in Springfield. In the Lincoln tomb.” xa0 “Not where he’s buried now. During the Civil War. His body wasn’t sent back to Springfield until 1865, when Lincoln was assassinated. Willie died in 1862. I want to know where he was buried for those three years.” xa0 I had no idea what Willie Lincoln had to do with Lincoln’s assassination dream, but I was too tired to ask. “You aren’t still having the reception, are you?” I said, hoping against hope that he would say they weren’t. “The roads are terrible.” xa0 “No, it’s still on.” Broun looked at his watch. “I’ve got to go get dressed. Those damned reporters always come early.” I must have looked like I felt, because he said, “The battle won’t be joined till eight o’clock, and I’ll take care of the preliminary skirmishes. Why don’t you go have a nap?” xa0 “I think I’ll take you up on that,” I said, and heaved myself up out of the chair. xa0 “Oh, would you do one favor for me first?” Broun said. “Would you call Richard Madison and make sure he’s coming tonight? His girlfriend said they’d be here, but I’d like you to call and make sure.” xa0 Lincoln’s dreams and Willie Lincoln’s body and now my old college roommate. I gave up even trying to look like I knew what he was talking about. xa0 “He called while you were gone,” Broun said, scratching at the stubble. “Said he had to get in touch with you right away. I told him I didn’t have a number for you but you’d be calling in and could I give you some kind of message, but he just said to tell you to call him, and then when you called I didn’t have a chance to pass the message on, so I called him to tell him you’d be back today.” xa0 There had to be a connection here somewhere. “You invited him to the reception?” I asked.

Features & Highlights

  • "A novel of classical proportions and virtues...humane and moving."–
  • The Washington Post Book World
  • "A love story on more than one level, and Ms. Willis does justice to them all. It was only toward the end of the book that I realized how much tension had been generated, how engrossed I was in the characters, how much I cared about their fates."–
  • The New York Times Book Review
  • For Jeff Johnston, a young historical reseacher for a Civil War novelist, reality is redefined on a bitter cold night near the close of a lingering winter. He meets Annie, an intense and lovely young woman suffering from vivid, intense nightmares. Haunted by the dreamer and her unrelenting dreams, Jeff leads Annie on an emotional odyssey through the heartland of the Civil War in search of a cure. On long-silenced battlefields their relationship blossoms–two obsessed lovers linked by unbreakable chains of history, torn by a duty that could destroy them both. Suspenseful, moving, and highly compelling,
  • Lincoln’s Dreams
  • is a novel of rare imaginative power.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(98)
★★★★
25%
(82)
★★★
15%
(49)
★★
7%
(23)
23%
(76)

Most Helpful Reviews

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A Magnificent Achievement

It's hard to figure on how to write a review for this book without giving anything away. Suffice it to say, for the short hook, that this is a book that no reader should go without. Connie Willis takes a hard theme and makes it relatable, understandable, and devastatingly personal for any reader who's willing to accept the book to start with.
I'm honestly amazed by some of the negative reviews that the novel gets. I can understand them, to a point--if you've read Connie Willis before, you may be somewhat distressed by the almost unbroken seriousness of tone and story in Lincoln's Dreams. This is not funny or amusing in the way that her better accepted stories are (Doomsday Book, for example, manages to maintain a sense of humor throughout the middle of its several hundred pages). Before you pick up this book, you need to understand that Connie doesn't go out of her way to make the story she's telling easy for you.
Nor should she, if you ask me. I'm willing to go along with everything that Willis lays before me in this story, including the sometimes difficult to understand characters. You need to know, though, that they are difficult to understand not because they are flat, but because they are decidedly human (and real people can sometimes be some of the most two dimensional you will ever meet, and I'm including literary figures in that analysis). There are a couple of points in the story where you have to grant Willis some liberties, but for the most part the characters are internally consistent and understandable.
The biggest obstacle that this story has is probably its theme--the destructive power of love. However, I was amazed to find when I took some time to sit back and think about the book that the author had managed not only to relate this fundamental theme to me, but that she had done so without the vitriolic hatred of the emotion that many who would try to address it seem to fall into. Indeed--the story shows the terrible destruction that love in all its forms can bring upon a person while still maintaining its desirability and its essential goodness. At the end of the story, you feel the loneliness that the lack of love brings, and I believe that this loneliness is the ultimate expression of the theme that Willis is trying to examine.
And the fact that she was able to evoke this in me and show these things to me is what ultimately marks this novel as a triumph for me. I'm not normally one to be emotionally affected by a story, but Connie Willis has always managed to pull my strings, and nowhere more than in this story. This is not a happy story (though it is not without wit, as some would have you believe) but it is an important one, and a lesson that any person can draw. In short, it is a transcendant work that may very well be looked back on as one of the best novels of the last half of the century, and I don't throw that praise around lightly. At the very least, you should at least give the book a try.
89 people found this helpful
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A powerful drama, not a character-less science fiction book.

In Lincoln's Dreams, Connie Willis does not portray the world of science fiction so much as the world of perceived reality. Her protagonist is Jeff, a historian, and through him the book explains the strange attraction between people and history. In seems that in some way Jeff wishes to understand himself and his relationships as being parallel to the characters and relationships which exist during the time period he is studying, the Civil War. Willis makes this interesting and usually hidden character trait visible by adding an ironic twist to the story: there really does seem to be a fantastic connection between the Civil War and Jeff (and his romantic interest, Annie's) lives. As Jeff and Annie try to figure out if they are Robert E. Lee, Abraham Lincoln, or one of a half dozen other Civil War characters, Willis beautifully and subtely explores how people define and order the murkier aspects of their lives. As a result, the book is both haunting and uplifting, deep and entertaining, and utterly real.
31 people found this helpful
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An Early, Weaker Work by a Great Writer

Now that Dauglas Adams is sadly no longer with us, Connie Willis clearly fulfills his place as the best Comic writer in SF. But the truth is, Willis is actually a better writer then Adams, because she is (1) more consistently brilliant then he is and (2) has serious, important issues running through her work. Her funny stories are rarely *just* funny.
Lincoln's Dreams, however, is a first novel, and it shows. Lots of Willis's traits are there: the interest in History and in obscurities and ancedotes, the downplayed romance, the paralel storyline between a puzzle the characters have to solve and their personal lives, some very nice turns of phrase.
But Lincoln's Dreams lacks alot of things Willis will improve on in her following works. The sense of humor, which is there even in her bleakest work (1993 Hugo and Nebula winner DOOMSDAY BOOK), is almost completely missing in this book.
The characters - people tend to talk about Willis's characterisation, but in truth, Willis uses architypes all the time. The characters in her books are almost identical (Think about the female leads of Even the Queen, Passage and Bellwhether, or on the male characters in To Say Nothing of The Dog, Remake, and also Passage), bot because Willis can't write different characters (as she does with the Quivrin in *Doomsday Book*), but because she builds a comedy that is based on our instant recognition of the characters, and thus can focus on the serious issues she disguises in the crazy and funny plots.
But in Lincoln's Dream, this ability isn't yet developed, and so the characters, instead of having the stock identity which allows us to sympathise with them while we follow their adventures, don't have any characterism whatsover. Broun and Annie are completely forgettable (Unlike Vallery in TO SAY NOTHING OF THE DOG, we never understand why Jeff falls for Annie). The only exceptions are Jeff, who is not yet the developed Willis leade personnality, but is the closest, and Richard, who is an archytype of later Willisean villains, but isn't quite one yet.
But the greatest weakness in this novel is that, literally nothing happens. There is no plot as to speak of. There's the mystery of what is the source of Annie's dreams. We get three solutions to that, all satisfactory, but Willis hasn't yet mastered the art of having her characters come to realisation about the nature of the plot, which later she will become very good at. So we don't feel like there really is a mystery here - we're never involved with Jeff's quest, and we can't even try to guess ahead.
And beyond the attempt to solve the dreams, we're in complete stasis throughout the book. Jeff and Annie are hiding from Richard, going to Civil War monuments, checking phone calls on the machine, and Jeff tries to convince Annie to take it easy. That's a simplification, but there really is little sense of progress. From page 50 to page 180 or so, the scenes are almost all interchangable.
Ultimately, Lincoln's Dreams (which should've been called Lee's Dreams), is not a bad book. There is enough interesting history, and an interesting final solution to the mystery, to justify reading it. But it is nowhere near as powerful a book as Willis's later works.
23 people found this helpful
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What's happening here?

I can't believe this book is written by the same author as Doomsday Book (which is one of the best books I have read in a long time). I kept slogging through Lincoln's Dreams, hoping that eventually it would make sense, but it never did enough to make the reading worthwhile. The civil war trivia was interesting, but the main characters had no depth and plot was just plain weird. Go read Doomsday Book or a Harry Turtledove book instead.
17 people found this helpful
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I Like Connis Willis But This Is Flawed.

Jeff Johnston, a young historical researcher doing work for a Civil War novelist, Broun, meets Annie, an emotionally disturbed young woman having vivid and terrifying dreams of events she does not know of or recognise. When she tells him of her dreams, he realises, and explains to her, that she is dreaming events from General Lee's life during the Civil War. He helps her to escape from her manipulative psychiatirst (who specialises in dream/sleep theory), and the both of them end up in Fredericksburg, ostensibly for research purposes, but in truth, for Annie to get to the bottom of her dreams.
Ms Willis writes with the same style of doom and trapped frustration that she so excels at, and certainly themes of free will figure greatly in her works. However, the material never quite seemed to be able to bear the weight of this treatment (read her short story, "Fire Watch" for an excellent example of that style) and, instead, sinks beneath it.
The novel tries to draw a parallel between the events of the Civil War and General Lee's life and the choices in Annie's own life. Central to the lives of both is the theme of duty, and how this drives each towards his / her own personal tragedy.
However, for this to work, we need to understand why the characters feel as driven as they do to ultimately sacrifice their lives. Unfortunately, I never quite understood the characters' motivations enough to be entirely convinced or moved by their plights.
I have read Willis' other works and liked some of them, so I tried to understand why I could not warm up to this one.
Ultimately, I felt that the novel frequently resorted to trite and clumsy plot devices to set up events. One particular flaw I felt was the technique used of foreshadowing events in the real world with events in Broun's novel. This never quite works, and feels clumsy and tacked on.
For example, Jeff, falling in love with Annie at first sight and going through hell for this woman he knows almost next to nothing about is foreshadowed with Jeff debating the merits of the character in the novel falling in love with a young nurse at first sight. Unfortunately, having Jeff TELL US that love at first sight is perfectly believable does not leave us convinced that his own act of falling in love at first sight is believable.
The rest of the characters were given much of the same treatment with a lot of TELLING that they must-be-compelled to act in a certain way but never giving us the insight into WHY. Ultimately, this left me feeling impatient and unconvinced about their plights, and feeling mightily unsympathetic. Since this was central to how well the novel worked, that their suffering came across as hollow to me pretty much eviscerated the core of the novel.
My Personal Rating Scale:
5 stars: Engaging, well-written, highly entertaining or informative, thought provoking, pushes the envelope in one or more ways, a classic.
4 stars: Engaging, well-written, highly entertaining or informative. Book that delivers well in terms of its specific genre or type, but does not do more than that.
3 stars: Competent. Does what it sets out to do competently, either on its own terms on within the genre, but is nothing special. May be clichéd but is still entertaining.
2 stars: Fails to deliver in various respects. Significantly clichéd. Writing is poor or pedestrian. Failed to hold my attention.
1 star: Abysmal. Fails in all respects.
9 people found this helpful
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unexpected treat

Lincoln's Dreams is one of those rare books you buy twice if you lose it or someone borrows it and does not return it. It was different than anything I've ever read before! Lincoln's Dreams inspired me to know more about the civil war; I did web research and I purchased 3 history books... still thirsty I researched my own family history. Connie Willis made the civil war personal for me in a way I never would have believed. If I were a history teacher this would be required reading.
8 people found this helpful
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"A pity beyond all telling . . ."

I was reminded of that W.B. Yeats line - "A pity beyond all telling is hid in the heart of love" -- after finishing this sleeper of a book. I don't mean sleep-inducing. Far, far from it. I mean this story creeps up on you until you find yourself caught in the middle of all the turbulence and tension without quite knowing why or how you got there. And I'll say this, although there's the whiff of a spoiler involved in saying it: I have never been so blindsided, disoriented and at the same time re-oriented and breathtakingly moved by a book's last line as I was by this one. I was shell-shocked for days, along with being appreciative of a writer who can pull off such sleight-of-hand, then put the last critical keystone in place with such a sadly perfect -- and perfectly sad -- ending.
7 people found this helpful
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Look at the title again

For those readers who think that "this book should have been called 'Lee's Dreams,'" look at the title again. Lincoln's dreams explain why Annie is having these terrifying dreams of death, at least according to the way Willis structures the novel: Lincoln dreamed of death because he had a physical condition that put him in danger of dying even before he was shot by Booth. Annie has a heart condition that threatens to kill her, and the dreams are a warning. Lee's dreams are a giant red herring; their content (death) is what matters, not so much who had them.

That said, this haunting, lyrical text about the Civil War depicts the horror of war (through Lee's dreams and Broun's novel) as skilfully as any I've ever read - and I'm including such classics as War and Peace, Galdos' National Episodes and All Quiet On the Western Front. There are many stories that take place on various levels in this novel, each illuminating the others but never tying everything up in a neat package (as is the case with Bellwether, Doomsday and Dog - which I also love, but for different reasons).

Lincoln's Dreams is an exceptional novel, almost musical in its complexity. Willis has made her story an incredibly lifelike artifact.
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A gem

I read this book several years ago and still think about it. It is a gem where time is a major character, and the nature of time and history the topic. I found it haunting and thoughtful and lovely.
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Haunting and understated

After reading this book I read an interview with the author where she said it was more about Traveller than Lee or Lincoln. Indeed it is about loyalty and unconditional love. I have previously read To Say Nothing of the Dog by Willis and still count it as one of my favorite books. But that was comic where this is simply stunning. It is the kind of book that makes you fall in love with the author for having created something so beautiful.
7 people found this helpful