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AUDIO BOOKS BOOKS

Posted in Audio Books (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Written by David Freeman Hawke. By Recorded Books. There are some available for $65.00.
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No comments about Franklin: A Biography.



Posted in Audio Books (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Written by Donald A. Davis. By Blackstone Audio Inc.. The regular list price is $54.95. Sells new for $34.62.
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2 comments about Stonewall Jackson: The Great Generals Series.
  1. I thought this book provided a succinct and accurate assessment of General Jackson's life and career. I do, however, offer three criticisms.

    First, a few maps would have been most helpful. The author presumes that the reader has a working knowledge of Jackson's major battles--the places they were fought, the strategy and tactics employed, and the surrounding topography. I realize that the Great General Series must make certain accommodations in order to accomplish its goal of providing a BRIEF overview of the life and service of its subjects, but a few maps would have greatly enhanced my understanding of what Jackson accomplished.

    Second, I thought the comparisons between Jackson's strategy and tactics and those employed in the Iraq War were both gratuitous and a bit of stretch, a not-so-veiled attempt to make the Civil War seem somehow relevant to the conflict in the Middle East.

    Third, the editors should have read the text one more time before it went to print. There were several typographical and formatting errors that were a bit of a distraction.

    These, however, are minor complaints. If you don't know much about Stonewall and want to get a feel for the contribution he made to the Confederacy and towards the evolution of military tactics, you would do well to read this book.


  2. Stonewall Jackson by Donald A. Davis
    (Palgrave Macmillan (2007), Hardcover, 224 pages)

    A review
    by
    Colin J. Edwards

    Stonewall or Oddball?

    I have to come clean immediately and confess that I have difficulty with the description, `tough fighting generals'. What they are describing are heartless individuals who send men to death or mutilation with reckless abandon. Let us remind ourselves that wars are started by politicians, fought by generals and won by soldiers. The American Civil War was the exception: the generals prolonged that one.
    Before you cast me aside as a peace-nik lefty, let me assure you that I saw action as an infantry officer, and know a little of what I speak.

    Books about wars: and this is a book about a war more than a biography of an individual, are either from an officer's perspective, or the enlisted man. Donald Davis is the exception being quite at home writing about either. His best seller `Lightening Strike', records the active service of a gunnery sergeant. However, I could find little sympathy for the fighting man in this volume. Mr Davis wrote with touching tenderness of the separation of General Jackson from his wife and new baby girl. A separation that didn't last long as the general called them to his side. Tens of thousands of ordinary soldiers from North and South would have thought precious, just a moment with their loved ones. Rank has its privilege it seems.

    Davis' detailed descriptions of the various battles are excellent, if a little tedious. This is due perhaps to a lack of information about Jackson who was such a secretive individual, that it's a wonder Davis was able to write the book at all.

    Born at Clarksburg West Virginia on January 21 1824 into an attorney's family, he preceded by four months another general and West Point chum who saw the light of day at Liberty Indiana in May: a future adversary, Ambrose Burnside.

    After a very unsettled childhood, he entered West Point more by luck than judgement. He struggled to keep up but had an almost eccentric ability to focus unswervingly on the subject at hand. This paid off and he was able to move up the rankings graduating 17th out of a class of 59. This was not good enough to get him into the esteemed engineers, but it did get him into the artillery as a second lieutenant. This single minded eccentricity bordering on autism became more apparent when he was under fire during the Mexican Way. Observation of his reckless valour caused him to be bumped up the ranks to acting major. Another manifestation of his disturbed mental state was his inability to work in harmony with others. His unresolved dispute with a brother officer while stationed at Fort Mead in Florida, resulted in him leaving the army and taking up a teaching post at Lexington Virginia.

    The general consensus was that Thomas Jackson was a poor teacher, but the eight years there gave him the opportunity to meet and marry two wives.

    The Civil War found him back in the army and up to his neck in muck and bullets in the battles so precisely delineated by Mr Davis. His eccentricity (or mental disturbance), new no bounds and he and his soldiers went from victory to victory even if it killed them. He even had one of his generals (A.P.Hill), dragged along behind a cart on an interminable march for some undisclosed actus reus. This so damaged the general's tender feet that he was out of action for some time. Not the action of a sound mind you might think; particularly when it concerns one of your better generals.

    Jackson continued to carry the whole war on his shoulders, confiding in no one until he experienced a nervous collapse. From then until the end of his life he was conspicuous for his ability to fall asleep anywhere. On one occasion he was summoned to see his boss Robert E Lee, and promptly fell asleep before he saw him.

    Thomas Jackson was a religious zealot who spoke more to God than anyone else. However, he did not practice what he preached, nor anything anyone else preached as he didn't stay awake long enough. He had no compunction in raking artillery fire into Mexican civilians when Mexico City failed to surrender in 1848, or later when he gunned down a retreating Mexican army. During the Civil War he showed no reluctance to destroy fellow Americans be them from the North or the South, and insisted that his officers do likewise.

    To experience fear while in the presence of danger is normal. To some extent it is possible to hide that fear. Jackson did not hide it; he did not have any fear. He constantly took needless risks and in front of his troops defied the conflagration to kill him.
    That was until Chancellorsville on May 2 1863. Throwing caution to the wind as usual, he took his staff beyond his own front lines to reconnoitre the enemy positions. True to form he omitted to inform anyone of his intentions. Upon his return he was fired upon by his own soldiers and hit three times. Six of his staff were killed outright. He however was not killed but was stretchered to an aid station falling off the stretcher on the way. The chief surgeon of Jackson's army, Dr Hunter McGuire, amputated his left arm, but did not notice General Jackson complaining about chest pain. The pain developed into pneumonia from which he died on May 10th 1863.

    Google Books list over 4000 entries for General Jackson, and most of them suggest that had he lived the result at Gettysburg would have been different. The generals lost the battle for the Confederates by their bickering and lack of direction. Jackson would have only added to the confusion. The soldiers of the South fought their hearts out at Gettysburg only to be betrayed by their officers.

    Donald Davis's book is a myth breaker, and a `must read' for anyone who has an interest in the first modern war.




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Posted in Audio Books (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Written by Charles Bracelen Flood. By Blackstone Audiobooks. The regular list price is $49.95. Sells new for $31.47. There are some available for $16.00.
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5 comments about Lee: The Last Years.
  1. Lee: The Last Years was well worth reading. A must for anyone who wants to know a little more of the Rest of The Story about a fine American, though much misunderstood.


  2. Bracelen Flood clearly does extensive research in order to render this intimate and engrossing portrayal of Lee.


  3. I've long considered myself a student of Southern history and the Civil War. Heck, I've been a historian at museums so I think I have a pretty good knowledge of the Civil War era. Furthermore, I live in Virginia and have been to the campus of Washington and Lee University. However, nearly every page of Charles Bracelen Flood's work on Robert E. Lee's post-war years is full of information I've never heard about. Flood has used many differing sources to pull together a wonderful, highly readable account of Lee's years after the war, how he came to be President of Washington College, and his role in the reconstruction of this country. What jumps out off the pages is that for as much as Lee has been studied and idolized for his exploits on the battlefield, his postwar years as President of the college should get just as much press. While Lee did not think defending his native state was wrong, he did wish for both North and South to reconcile as quickly as possible. After reading the book, I still do not think Lee is the god that some people hold him up to be, but he does stand out as a good man who wanted to bring the nation back together while also helping his fellow Southerners get back on their feet. While Flood's writing can be unimaginative at times and I thought he threw in little stories and vignettes that he didn't need too, the book is excellent overall and should be a must read for anyone interested in Lee. However, the book is such an easy, good read that I think almost anyone should pick it up.


  4. Outstanding biography of the man. Much has been written about the general, this book brings the humble father, husband and Christian man to life.


  5. Lee: The Last Years

    This is a wonderful book about a wonderful man. Although Robert E. Lee is most remembered as a General, for most of his adult life, he was an engineer and educator (although in the army). Mr. Lee could have become very wealthy after the war by simply allowing his name to be used commercially. However, he wanted to make a contribution and did so by accepting the position as President of Washington College. He seldom spoke of the war and brought no military flavor to the College.

    There is an argument that Robert E. Lee is responsible for more American dead than any other single individual. The difficult part of this book is tying to tie that Robert E. Lee to the man he was in his last five (5) years. He played Santa at Christmas, broke up a lynching, stroked the ego of his horse Traveller, was a good family man, looked out for the under dog and took care of his students, even when they were in trouble. How he handled all these situations, often minor by standards of the war, brings out the essence of the man including his character, values, wit and subtle humor.

    I have read/studied history and biography for 40 years. I have spent more time on Robert E. Lee than any other individual and this book someway brings all my study of Mr. Lee together and puts it in perspective. I highly recommend this book to anyone with any interest in American History. Thanks Mr. Flood.


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Posted in Audio Books (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Written by Vincent and Norah. By Blackstone Audiobooks, Inc.. Sells new for $54.95.
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Posted in Audio Books (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Written by Arte Johnson. By Viking Penguin. The regular list price is $6.95. Sells new for $34.94. There are some available for $15.16.
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No comments about Best of Newt Gingrich's Bedtime Stories for Orphans.



Posted in Audio Books (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Written by Rabbi Berel Wein. By The Destiny Foundation. Sells new for $8.00.
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No comments about The Life and Times of Shimon bar Yochai, Kabbalist and Talmudic Hero.



Posted in Audio Books (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Written by Deibler Rose and Darlene. By Blackstone Audiobooks, Inc.. Sells new for $54.95.
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No comments about Evidence Not Seen (Library.



Posted in Audio Books (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Written by Corona W. Anderson. By Audio Book Contractors, Inc.. Sells new for $19.95.
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No comments about Memories Of Carl Gustav Jung.



Posted in Audio Books (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Written by Michael Shelden. By Blackstone Audiobooks. The regular list price is $89.95. Sells new for $56.67.
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No comments about Orwell.



Posted in Audio Books (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Written by Hazel B. Aird. By Blackstone Audiobooks. The regular list price is $35.95. Sells new for $28.40. There are some available for $22.97.
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No comments about Henry Ford: Young Man With Ideas, Library Edition (Ready Reader).



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Franklin: A Biography
Stonewall Jackson: The Great Generals Series
Lee: The Last Years
Voluntary Madness (Library
Best of Newt Gingrich's Bedtime Stories for Orphans
The Life and Times of Shimon bar Yochai, Kabbalist and Talmudic Hero
Evidence Not Seen (Library
Memories Of Carl Gustav Jung
Orwell
Henry Ford: Young Man With Ideas, Library Edition (Ready Reader)

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Last updated: Sat Oct 11 08:52:00 EDT 2008