Sheppard Lee, Written by Himself. Vol. 2 (of 2) by Robert Montgomery Bird
Let's catch up. Sheppard Lee isn't your average hero. After discovering he can possess the bodies of the recently deceased, he spent Volume One bouncing from one identity to another—a wealthy man, an enslaved man, a foolish heir—seeing American society from every angle. Volume Two picks up this frantic journey. Lee is getting tired. He's haunted by the lives he's lived and the people he's been. He wants his own body back, his own farm, his own name. But the 'gift' of transformation won't let him go so easily.
The Story
This half of the book follows Lee as he continues his desperate, often involuntary, leapfrog through different corpses. Each new skin he wears is a fresh experiment. He might find himself in the middle of a family feud, a political scandal, or a criminal plot, with no manual on how to behave. The plot is less a straight line and more a series of sharp, satirical vignettes held together by Lee's growing panic and confusion. He's a permanent outsider, even in his own borrowed life, and his attempts to fix things or do good usually backfire in spectacular ways. The central question shifts from 'What kind of life can I try next?' to 'How do I make this stop?'
Why You Should Read It
What grabbed me wasn't just the crazy premise, but what Bird does with it. This is a brutally funny and insightful look at identity written nearly 200 years ago. Lee thinks a new body will solve his problems, but he's always trapped by its circumstances—its debts, its relationships, its social standing. The book argues that we're not just souls floating around; we're shaped, for better or worse, by the physical and social world we inhabit. It's also a sneaky history lesson. You see the anxieties about money, class, and freedom that were boiling in pre-Civil War America, all through the eyes of a man who gets to be on all sides of the argument.
Final Verdict
This is a book for the curious reader. It's perfect for fans of historical fiction who want something off the beaten path, or for anyone who loves a speculative idea played for both laughs and serious thought. If you enjoy stories about messed-up protagonists, social satire, or early American literature that isn't by Hawthorne or Melville, give Sheppard Lee a shot. Be warned: it's quirky, uneven in places (it was published in 1836!), and wildly inventive. It feels less like a dusty classic and more like a strange, compelling conversation with the past.
Sarah Wilson
1 year agoWithout a doubt, the atmosphere created is totally immersive. Exactly what I needed.
Mason King
1 year agoVery interesting perspective.
Jennifer Ramirez
7 months agoPerfect.
Charles Jones
7 months agoVery interesting perspective.
Steven Rodriguez
1 year agoIf you enjoy this genre, the pacing is just right, keeping you engaged. Absolutely essential reading.