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CIVIL WAR BOOKS

Posted in Civil War (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Ruth Scarborough. By Mercer University Press. The regular list price is $19.95. Sells new for $12.41. There are some available for $14.82.
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No comments about BELLE BOYD.



Posted in Civil War (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Harold B. Birch. By AuthorHouse. The regular list price is $21.49. Sells new for $13.40. There are some available for $20.80.
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No comments about THE 101ST PENNSYLVANIA IN THE CIVIL WAR: ITS CAPTURE AND POW EXPERIENCE: The Saga of a Lucky Bedford, PA, Lieutenant and his Unlucky Regiment.



Posted in Civil War (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Paul Fatout. By Purdue University Press. The regular list price is $19.95. Sells new for $4.01. There are some available for $2.25.
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No comments about Letters of a Civil War Surgeon.



Posted in Civil War (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Patricia Cheatham Cobb. By BookSurge Publishing. Sells new for $14.99.
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1 comments about America's Buried Children.
  1. An original photograph (1860's), of a rarely photographed subject (IF EVER?), of the author's married mulatto and white great-grandparents is placed in the center of the book's vivid graphics and engrossing narrative. In an era of extreme racial violence (and with interracial sex and marriage illegal (state constitution) in Alabama until 2000) the author lets the reader SEE how it is and why the author's great-grandparents risked their lives to marry and raise a family. The intertwining of the author's oral and photographic family history allows the reader to witness why AMERICA'S DIVERSITY is it's greatest asset!


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Posted in Civil War (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Roger D. Hunt. By Stan Clark Military Books. Sells new for $65.00. There are some available for $61.75.
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No comments about Brevet Brigadier Generals in Blue.



Posted in Civil War (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by William Winters. By University of Nebraska Press. The regular list price is $35.00. Sells new for $4.25. There are some available for $1.80.
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No comments about The Musick of the Mocking Birds, the Roar of the Cannon: The Civil War Diary and Letters of William Winters.



Posted in Civil War (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Laura N. Rickarby. By Silver Burdett Pr. There are some available for $0.01.
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1 comments about Ulysses S. Grant and the Strategy of Victory (History of the Civil War Series).
  1. This is one of the better books written about Ulysses S. Grant that are intended for children. Actually, in this case the term "young adults" is more appropriate because the text would be a bit complicated for children.

    Rickarby writes quite well and like many women authors, seems to understand Grant, who had a plethora of female characteristics, such as kindness, gentleness and compassion. The military chapters are not especially good and there are a number of basic mistakes in describing various battles. Rickarby is stronger in the domestic realm, and she describes Grant's happy marriage and his life as a father very well.

    The most outstanding part of the book are the paintings. In particular, there is a fabulous color depiction of Grant standing on the corner in St. Louis, selling firewood in the late 1850's. If you're a fan of General Grant, this painting alone makes the book a necessary purchase. Rarely has his mood, stance and demenenor been so well captured.



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Posted in Civil War (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Bennett, H. Young. By J.S. Sanders & Co.. The regular list price is $15.95. Sells new for $9.18. There are some available for $6.05.
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No comments about Confederate Wizards of the Saddle.



Posted in Civil War (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Debby Applegate. By Doubleday. The regular list price is $27.95. Sells new for $10.98. There are some available for $4.79.
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5 comments about The Most Famous Man in America: The Biography of Henry Ward Beecher.
  1. This book is the excellent product of twenty years of research and documentation by many people. The data upon which the book is based comes from the letters and diaries of the individuals portrayed and from the newspaper accounts about them at the time. The author skillfully weaves the data into a picture spanning from the 1820s to the 1880s.

    Reading this book is like sitting before a window and peering into the life of an amazingly charismatic individual and those upon whom he had a great impact. You see his gradual escape from the extremities of religious fundamentalism to an extremity on the other end of the religious spectrum. Along the way he succumbed to his human weaknesses. His temptations were made more potent due to absolute adoration by his followers and his spontaneous and haphazard personality. Perhaps, in this country, he was the most skillful speaker of his century in spite of his inconsistent message. Without him England might have intervened in our civil war on the side of the South profoundly changing our history.

    You get, not only, a view of their lives, but also of their hearts, minds and emotions because you read their diaries and most personal letters which were concealed from others at the time. Many are famous people such as Abraham Lincoln, Andrew Johnson, Mark Twain and his sibling Harriet Beecher Stowe among many others.

    As you read this book you begin to understand nuances of the late colonial and early Victorian era that history books miss. You see the holes in the stereotypes of the time. You see similarities to current times and you will see profound differences. You see how lack of modern medical technology and birth control put intense pressure on women. The divisive issues of the day like abortion, promiscuity, drugs (including alcohol) and religious extremes are all still issues today. They addressed them in a different manner and with a different perspective.

    I don't read much fiction because it is just fiction and based upon the author's perception of reality at best. This book interests me because it portrays many people's perception of the reality of their time based upon their own written records.

    Jim Fuqua


  2. I am an author, a Christian, and a Calvinist. I love good history. However, after the deep prejudice against, and misunderstanding of Calvinism portrayed in the first two chapters, I almost put the book down.

    Despite these reservations, I am glad I persevered. Applegate writes in an engaging, entertaining style. I finished with fresh incite into the political machinations of early 19th century America, especialy New York, New England, and the history of the early abolitionist movement.

    I also concluded down deeply disturbed and distressed by the subject of the book, Henry Ward Beecher. Applegate repeatedly stresses two attributes of Beecher's moral character. The first was his lust for fame and popularity. The second is his continual compromise of conscience to obtain that popularity. These compromises ruined his life and the lives of many associated with him. She closes by comparing him to Dr. Martin Luther King, John F. Kennedy, and Bill Clinton, all good comparisons, and in my opinion, all deeply distressing hypocrites like Beecher.

    I finished the book with mixed feelings of revulsion and empathy for Beecher. He was a first class hypocrite. He continually preached love, but abused and used his wife, his congregation, his business associates and the women with whom he comitted adultery. He pretended to be one thing, but in reality was the exact opposite. Was he weak? Yes, like all of us he was weak. But was he sincere? It doesn't appear that he was. A sincere man seeks help. He wants to change. He humbles himself and exposes his weakness. Beecher did none of these Instead, continually and habitually covered up the damning evidence that pointed to his sins. That is not the definition of a good person.

    Did he do some good? Yes. He was a key figure in the abolitionist movement. But, in other respects he was much like the men exposed in Paul Johnson's insightful book, "Intellectuals." He was a man who loved the world in general, but was incapable of loving those closest to himself.

    Despite these facts, the author was unwilling to call Beecher what he really was, "a wolf in sheeps clothing." She concludes, "His painful awareness of his own weakness and his ongoing battle to overcome them were the wellspring of his great and lasting contribution to American life: the all forgiving Gospel of Love. As Beecher would have said, without sin there can be no saving grace."

    It appears that Applegate, like Beecher, is in love with love, but not real virtue. True loves serves, expends itself, humbles itself, and dies that other might live. But Applegate's conclusion spins evil, refusing to come to grips with it or condemn it. Yes God is love, but He is also justice. The two cannot be separated.

    This is not the definition of a good man. I expected Applegate to draw this clear conclusion. I was disappointed.

    In short, Applegate writes well. I am thankful for her research, and the volumes of excellent information on Beecher and his times. I am deeply disturbed by her conclusions. They express the same loss of moral compass as the man she writes about, Henry Ward Beecher


  3. This book was really great. You feel like you are alive at the time of Beecher. You watch as he emerges from his father's formidable shadow to become the most popular American preacher of his day.

    But in the process, you will also see Beecher jettison virtually every doctrine of Christinaity save the doctrine of love for God and for others. Unfortunately, it appears that Henry took the "love for others" part a bit too literally, as he was a very flirtatious and apparently adulterous man.

    It is amazing to see how he skirts out of trouble time and again. He somehow has his wife convinced that he is a man of high virtue, and he is also able to convince a number of his mistresses that their affairs with him are higher forms of love, even religious love.

    And yet in spite of his peccadilloes, Henry Ward Beecher was an indispuably great orator, a man who had his congregation eating out of his hand. Henry loved to preach about the pressing issues of his day, although one could accuse him of waffling on issues when the boat was rocked. He was at first neutral on the slavery issue, then he was a cautious abolitionist, then he even came to the point of advocating violence if necessary.

    Perhaps his most shining moment was in 1863 while preaching in England. His stirring speeches about America convinced the British not to lend their support to the South, and this may have helped Lincoln to preserve the Union.

    You will learn not only about Beecher's relationships with women (his wife Eunice, Elizabeth Thornton, Edna Proctor, Chloe Beach), but you will also get to know the New York newspaperman Henry Bowen, who convinced Henry to come to New York. You will also meet the complex Theodore Tilton, who goes from being a star struck Beecher fan to being a jealous husband who wants to see Beecher fall from grace.

    Debby Applegate writes in a stirring style, and you will want to drop everything else and keep reading. You learn a lot about history along the way.

    The only complaint I have is that Applegate slams Calvinism way too much. She treats it as if it is a terrible system of belief and that it makes happy people dour. She seems to think that Lyman Beecher (Henry's father) was a much better man than his theological system would allow.

    I am not a Calvinist, but I respect Calvinism as a viable and reasonable expression of Christian faith. The book would have been just as great without the anti-Calvinist bias.


  4. A remarkable read for its insight into the America of the 1850s and 1860s and into the America of the 2000s. The only real difference is that the Evangelists of 1850-60 are now tele-evangelists, still raising money, still getting involved in politics, and still dabbling in sins of the flesh to one degree or another. The more things change, the more they remaint the same.

    A thoroughly fascinating read for the information it imparts about that time and the similarities to the times in which we live.

    Helps the reader understand in new and different ways some of the causes of the Civil War and puts those reasons in in very human terms. Politics and Religion were entangled then, as now....

    Henry Ward Beecher would be as much at home now, just as rich, just as popular and probably just as promiscious as he was in his day. By understanding his day, we have a better, cleaner understanding of this day.

    In other words, Men of God can accomplish good, sometimes great things without being perfect people.


  5. Applegate's biography on Henry Ward Beecher is very readable, but too short. Some things are covered very well, and others almost ignored by comparison.

    You learn alot about his relationship with his father and siblings, but very little about his wife and children. His thoughts and actions regarding slavery are well fleshed out, but I wish word one had been said about his opinions regarding other controversies of the time. What did Beecher make of Mormonism, for example? Applegate doesn't have much to say about Beecher's theology either, after he breaks with his father - at least not enough to satisfy me. She prefers to pay attention to the intrigues and finances of his congregation (which, by all means, is worth while).

    In other words: I was left wanting more.


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Posted in Civil War (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Catherine Clinton. By Amistad. The regular list price is $15.99. Sells new for $3.99. There are some available for $1.73.
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2 comments about Hold the Flag High.
  1. A stirring, patriotic and yet perhaps little known story of a Civil War battle. I found it too mature for younger than 7-year olds, but with some background information it could be read to them effectively. The 2nd graders I read to were very interested but puzzled when they found the battle had been lost. They cheered up to see the actual photo of the hero and to hear the war was eventually won. Third to sixth graders will enjoy reading it for themselves and may be encouraged to seek out more Civil War history.


  2. This book is the story about the Massachusetts 54th Regiment during the Civil War, which was all African American. This book appears to be designed for early elementary students, but the nature of the artwork would be appealing to older students, including English language learners. This perspective story could be an excellent way to engage students to talk about the Civil War, ethnicity, bigotry, exclusion, and tough diversity issues.


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BELLE BOYD
THE 101ST PENNSYLVANIA IN THE CIVIL WAR: ITS CAPTURE AND POW EXPERIENCE: The Saga of a Lucky Bedford, PA, Lieutenant and his Unlucky Regiment
Letters of a Civil War Surgeon
America's Buried Children
Brevet Brigadier Generals in Blue
The Musick of the Mocking Birds, the Roar of the Cannon: The Civil War Diary and Letters of William Winters
Ulysses S. Grant and the Strategy of Victory (History of the Civil War Series)
Confederate Wizards of the Saddle
The Most Famous Man in America: The Biography of Henry Ward Beecher
Hold the Flag High

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Last updated: Mon Oct 13 07:13:26 EDT 2008