Exceptional Child
In this sad world of ours, sorrow comes to all; and, to theyoung, it comes with bitterest agony, because it takes them unawares.
--Abraham Lincoln, in a letter to Fanny McCullogh December 23rd, 1862
The boy had been crouched so long that his legs had fallen asleep beneath him--but he dared not move now. For here, in a small clearing in the frostbitten forest, were the creatures he had waited so long to see. The creatures he’d been sent to kill. He bit down on his lip to keep his teeth from chattering, and aimed his father’s flintlock rifle exactly as he’d been taught. The body, he remembered. The body, not the neck. Quietly, carefully he pulled the hammer back and pointed the barrelat his target, a large male who’d fallen behind the others. Decades later, the boy would recall what happened next.
I hesitated. Not out of a conflict of conscience, but for the fear that my rifle had gotten too wet, and thus wouldn’t fire. However, this fear proved unfounded, for when I pulled the trigger, the stock hit my shoulder with such force as to knock me clean onto my back.
Turkeys scattered in every direction as Abraham Lincoln, seven years old, picked himself off the snow-covered ground. Rising to his feet, he brought his fingers to the strange warmth he felt on his chin. “I’d bitten my lip clean through,” he wrote. “But I hardly gave a holler. I was desperate to know if I had hit the poor devilor not.
He had. The large male flapped its wings wildly, pushing itself through the snow in small circles. Abe watched from a distance, “afraid it might somehow rise up and tear me to pieces.” The flapping of wings; the dragging of feathers through snow. These were the only sounds in the world. They were joined by the crunching beneath Abe’s feet as he found his nerve and approached. The wings beat less forcefully now.
It was dying.
He had shot it clean through the neck. The head hung at an unnaturalangle--dragged across the ground as the bird continued to thrash. The body, not the neck . With every beat of its heart, blood poured from the wound and onto the snow, where it mixed with the dark droplets from Abe’s bleeding lip and the tears that had already begun to fall down his face.
It gasped for breath, but could draw none, and its eyes wore a kind of fear I had never seen. I stood over the miserable bird for what seemed a twelvemonth, pleading with God to make its wings fall silent. Begging His forgiveness for so injuring a creature that had shown me no malice; presented no threat to my person or prosperity. Finally it was still, and, plucking up my courage, I dragged it through a mile of forest and laid it at my mother’s feet--my head hung low so as to hide my tears.
This is an excerpt from “ABRAHAM LINCOLN: VAMPIRE HUNTER” by Seth Grahame-Smith. Copyright © 2010 by Seth Grahame Smith. Reprinted by permission of Grand Central Publishing, a division of Hachette Book Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
When Abraham Lincoln was nine years old, his mother died from an ailment called the “milk sickness.” Only later did he learn that her fatal affliction was actually the work of a vampire. “Henceforth,” he wrote in his journal, “My life shall be one of rigorous study and devotion. I shall become...a master of mind and body. And this mastery shall have but one purpose...."
Gifted with his legendary height, strength and skill with an ax, Abe sets out on a path of vengeance that will lead him all the way to the White House.
While Abraham Lincoln is widely lauded for saving the Union and freeing millions of slaves, no one has ever known about his valiant lifelong battle with the undead...until Seth Grahame-Smith became the first living person to lay eyes on his secret journal in more than 140 years.
Using the journal as his guide and writing with the biographical flair of Doris Kearns Goodwin and David McCullough, Seth has reconstructed the true life story of the Great Emancipator—putting a supernatural spin on revisionist history while uncovering the role vampires played in the birth, growth, and near-death of our nation. Includes creatively altered historical photographs throughout the book.
Hardcover : 352 pages
Publisher: Hachette Book Group Usa ( March 02, 2010 )
Item #: 13-115523
ISBN: 9780446563086
Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 8.25 inches
Product Weight: 15.0 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

This is the best book I've read in awhile. My son recommended it to me, and I thought he was crazy! The author does an excellent job of entertwining fact and fantasy. It's mesmerizing, and almost makes you believe it's real.
Reviewer: Sally
Good idea, but skimpy on story. The ending was just wrong; having him go against everything that he abhorred.
Reviewer: Richard F
I am a fan of history. This novel reads like a history text. The events seem believable
and the style of writing was enjoyable. I hope that the movie does the book justice.
Reviewer: John K
what all the stuff that happen to abe lincoln with the death of his mother to how his father was so strict and kept his money for awhile. his so called friendship with henry was rare but it made him stronger in a lot of ways. i like the book and have only 10 pages left.
Reviewer: wj
I will never doubt my daughter's recommendations for books ever again. She raved about this book and told me I'd probably get a kick out of it. Both of us are avid readers but we enjoy different genres. She loaned her book to a friend so I was not able to borrow hers. She finally broke me down, especially with the movie coming soon. Bought this book and loved it. I love history and the blend of the macabre and history intrigued me beyond my imagination. Now she is trying to get me to read Pride, Prejudice and Zombies. We'll see.
Reviewer: Deb
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