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Essential classics of the Civil War

Minsik readers
0.0
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Other platforms
3.7
3 ratings
3
BOOKS
1,761
PAGES
~29h 21min
READING TIME

About Author

Stephen W. Sears

Stephen Ward Sears (born July 27, 1932) is an American historian specializing in the American Civil War. Source: [Stephen W. Sears]( on Wikipedia.

Description

Of all the days on all the fields where American soldiers have fought, the most terrible was September 17, 1862. The Civil War battle waged on that date at Antietam Creek, Maryland, took a human toll never exceeded on any day in our nation's history. The battle at Antietam was pivotal to the course of the war, yet the complete story of this climactic and bitter struggle has never been told. In Landscape Turned Red, Stephen W. Sears draws on a wealth of newly discovered diaries, dispatches, and letters to recreate the vivid drama of Antietam -- and drama it is, pitting high-stakes military gambler Robert E. Lee against George B. McClellan, the general with every soldierly quality but one, the will to fight. Sears's subject is not just generals and their tactics, however; it is also the emotions and experiences of the men in the ranks, and their stories emerge here with powerful authenticity. With Landscape Turned Red, the literary successor of renowned historian Bruce Catton fills a major gap in Civil War literature and tells an engrossing, human tale of a momentous battle and the men who fought it. - Jacket flap.

How the series evolves

beginning
Landscape Turned Red
3.7· strong start
the pit
The life of Johnny Reb
0.0
finale
Mary Chesnut's Civil War
0.0· messes up the ending
overall
1.2· better in the beginning

Books in this Series

Landscape Turned Red

3.7 (3)
0

Of all the days on all the fields where American soldiers have fought, the most terrible was September 17, 1862. The Civil War battle waged on that date at Antietam Creek, Maryland, took a human toll never exceeded on any day in our nation's history. The battle at Antietam was pivotal to the course of the war, yet the complete story of this climactic and bitter struggle has never been told. In Landscape Turned Red, Stephen W. Sears draws on a wealth of newly discovered diaries, dispatches, and letters to recreate the vivid drama of Antietam -- and drama it is, pitting high-stakes military gambler Robert E. Lee against George B. McClellan, the general with every soldierly quality but one, the will to fight. Sears's subject is not just generals and their tactics, however; it is also the emotions and experiences of the men in the ranks, and their stories emerge here with powerful authenticity. With Landscape Turned Red, the literary successor of renowned historian Bruce Catton fills a major gap in Civil War literature and tells an engrossing, human tale of a momentous battle and the men who fought it. - Jacket flap.

Mary Chesnut's Civil War

0.0 (0)
0

An authorized account of the Civil War, drawn from the diaries of a Southern aristocrat, records the disintegration and final destruction of the Confederacy.