Cold Mountain is a 1997 historical novel by
Charles Frazier which won the U.S.
National Book Award for Fiction. It tells the story of W. P. Inman, a wounded deserter from the
Confederate army near the end of the
American Civil War who walks for months to return to Ada Monroe, the love of his life; the story shares several similarities with Homer's
The Odyssey. The narrative alternates back and forth every chapter between the stories of Inman and Monroe, a minister's daughter recently relocated from Charleston to a farm in the rural mountain community called Cold Mountain from which Inman hails. Though they only knew each other for a brief time before Inman departed for the war, it is largely the hope of seeing Ada again that drives Inman to desert the army and make the dangerous journey back to Cold Mountain. Details of their brief history together are told at intervals in flashback over the course of the novel.