Virginia Books


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Virginia Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Virginia
I Think I Hear Sleigh Bells
Published in Paperback by Infinity Publishing (PA) (2003-07-09)
Author: Virginia C. Foley
List price: $17.95
New price: $11.23
Used price: $10.48

Average review score:

Money Doesn't Buy You Love
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-21
Physically abandoned by his mother, then emotionally abandoned by his father, Ethan thinks he has it all figured out - how not to get hurt. When the tide starts to turn though and he starts to care a little too much - he begins to understand how his parents did what they THOUGHT was best at the time. Luckily there is still time to mend a Father- son relationship and when his mother tries to regain entry to his life - Ethan surprises us all!
I LOVED Righteous Indignation and had a hard time getting to read this without feeling as though I was betraying THAT main man!
Can't wait for the third!

An Emotional Sleigh Ride!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-18
Ethan McBride might be the tragic hero of this novel, but he handles it beautifully. His pseudo-orphaned lifestyle up until the point of the story has created quite a character out of him, a heart-breaker and a talented individual, yet modest and even quite humble. He may be rich, but he proves to us all that money cannot buy happiness, and though he grew up in posh and comfortable surroundings, he was someone I could identify with from the beginning. Virginia Foley hits another home run with this novel, another tear-jerker and powerful book. Buy it today!

Terrific new author
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-04
After loving Virginia Foley's first book, "Righteous Indignation" I couldn't wait to get the notice that her second book was out. Believe me she didn't disappoint! "I think I hear Sleigh Bells is a great read.

Virginia
An Illustrated Guide to Eastern Woodland Wildflowers and Trees: 350 Plants Observed at Sugarloaf Mountain, Maryland
Published in Hardcover by University of Virginia Press (2004-03)
Authors: Melanie Choukas-Bradley and Tina Thieme Brown
List price: $39.95
New price: $31.56
Used price: $21.89

Average review score:

Beautifully illustrated book on an equally as beautiful mtn
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-16
This is the second in a series of 2 books on the Sugarloaf Mountain region in Barnesville, Maryland. A must-have for any local resident to Washington DC, Maryland or Virginia, you will literally feel like you are up on the mountain in the pages of this book, whose gorgeous illustrations and writing bring the mountain to life in any reader's mind as vividly as the real thing! More importantly, the beauty throughout the pages of this book will drive you out Hwy 70 right over to and up the mountain to see it first hand. One of the North-east's best kept treasures, Sugarloaf Mountain was once the runner-up for what became Camp David, this field guide provides readers with a truely tangible appreciation for why it was also among FDR's favorite resting spots! Make it yours too, beginning with this book!

An excellent field guide with exquisite illustrations.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-15
This book is far more detailed than any other wildflower guides I've seen but is written in simple language that I can understand. The illustrations are beautiful and so detailed that it makes it easy to identify wildflowers I find on Sugarloaf Mountain and in walks along the Potomac River. I like learning about medicinal uses of native plants and the book is filled with herbal lore. It's a friendly book that is scientifically accurate and detailed but also contains personal anecdotes in which the author's love of trees and wildflowers comes through. I carry both this book and the companion volume--Sugarloaf: The Mountain's History, Geology and Natural Lore on my hikes.

One of my favorite things about the book is that the plants are organized according to families, with information about each plant family. It's fun to find members of the lily family and the rose family growing in the woods. The book helps you understand relationships between plants in a meaningful way. I like thinking about how this onion that I'm eating is related to the trout lily that grows along Sugarloaf Mountain's streams! Plus, its illustrated glossary is an extremely helpful learning tool.

I recommend this field guide to everyone, from novice to experienced botanists.

THE GOOD WORD
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-16
This is from the July issue of Pomegranate Seeds
pomegranateseeds@comcast.net

THE GOOD WORD:
A New Field Guide to Eastern
Wildflowers, Trees and Shrubs
by Jeri Metz

I just purchased the most authoritative and readable field guide to wildflowers, herbs, shrubs, vines and trees for the Mid-Eastern United States. An Illustrated Guide to Eastern Woodland Wildflowers and Trees by Melanie Choukas-Bradley, illustrated by Tina Thieme Brown, is eminently readable and includes all the local native and naturalized species that grow abundantly here without any help from us. This is the perfect book for anyone who is interested in gardening with Mother Nature, creating a water-wise native plant garden, or just identifying the local plants while out walking and hiking. The author describes the plants with expert plant taxonomy, humor, and personal anecdotes, throwing in folklore and history where appropriate. She includes specifics on habitat and range, as well as bloom time and where the plants can be found when walking the trails of Sugarloaf Mountain, Maryland. The illustrations, drawn from life, are simple and beautiful, appropriately delicate when describing fragile spring wildflowers, richly detailed and imposing when capturing the hardier species. They compliment every page they are on.

The book is a love letter from two naturalists to their adored Sugarloaf Mountain, where they spent ten years hiking and painstakingly identifying the plants. They view the mountain as a rare gift and "a learning laboratory." But this guide is so much more than the plants on Sugarloaf Mountain. It covers every plant I could think to look up. It includes a very readable botanical key and a comprehensive illustrated glossary. There are suggested readings. But what makes it unique and exceptional in my library of field guides, is the personal touch in both the writings and drawings. The love that Choukas-Bradley and Brown feel for these plants jumps from the pages and I can feel and see how wondrous and magical each plant is for them. By sharing their reverence and respect for all these plants, they inspire while they educate.

An Illustrated Guide to Eastern Woodland Wildflowers and Trees; 350 Plants Observed at Sugarloaf Mountain, Maryland, by Melanie Choukas-Bradley. Illustrated by Tina Thieme Brown. University of Virginia Press. $39.95 through the Audubon Naturalist Society and bookstores and on www.amazon.com.

Virginia
Indian Island in Amherst County
Published in Hardcover by Warwick House Pub (1993-09)
Author: Peter W. Houck
List price: $14.95
New price: $51.00
Used price: $30.59
Collectible price: $39.97

Average review score:

A Tale of Survival
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-10
Dr. Houck's book, Indian Island is the tale of survival! It is a testament to the Monacan people's triumph over hardship and years of discrimination. A proud, yet gentle and kind people, the Monacans were among the many victims of the eugenics movement. Political powers wanted them to be forgotten and invisible, but Dr. Houck brings them back to the forefront of our collective conscience. As one who is privileged to know and associate with several members of this tribe and who has personally witnessed the discrimination they face still today, I applaud Dr. Houck, this book, and most of all this couragous group of people. Having finally achieved state recognition from Virginia, today they continue their struggle to gain the federal recognition which is long overdue. May America finally recognize the existence of its first residents!

Indian Island In Amherst County
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-28
Having been married to one of the Johns decendants (in Amherst County, VA), I must say that this is probably one of the most accurate depictions of life for the Monacan Indians as any I have heard. I would like to add that Dr. Houck was my daughters neo-natologist when she was born very prematurely...24 years ago!! If you enjoy this book, read MATOHE, written by Cathy Smoot Carson.

Entry Point for Students of Monacan Indian History
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-25
Peter Houck and Mintcy Maxham do a wonderful job of presenting a generalized history of the Monacan tribe. As with any generalized History study, consisting of one volume, covering centuries of time, and possibly thousands of individuals, the reader should not expect a complete detailed history of the tribe, but rather a jumping off point to further enhance his or her education of the Monacan past. While lots of specific details are missing, the major events are listed. This list of major Monacan occurrences, along with an ample Bibliography, gives everyone from the begining historical student to the advanced researcher many sources and avenues to approach the study of Monacan history and culture.

Virginia
The Invention of George Washington
Published in Paperback by University of Virginia Press (1999-03)
Author: Paul K. Longmore
List price: $22.50
New price: $10.00
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Average review score:

Washington, a Complex Character
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-28
Paul Longmore's biography of George Washington is a superb book. It portrays Washington as a complex Virginian. Neither a stone-like figure nor an unread hero, Washington becomes an interesting and even vulnerable leader. Well written, Longmore's book is a must for people interested in Washington and in colonial history.

A deliberate, power hungry G.W.
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-22
Paul Longmore has written an excellent book for the serious George Washington scholar. George Washington is a difficult man to understand. After reading five books on the man, along with several published books and articles on the Revolutionary War, Federalist Period, and biographies of other people who were active in Washington's days, I still have a hard time grasping why such a diverse group of people universally looked up to and respected Washington. Edmund Morgan's book, "The Genius of George Washington" helped me to understand how Washington wielded power once it was attained, and this book helps to fill in the gaps as it describes how George Washington worked his way toward greatness.

Longmore's argument in the book is that George Washington was FAR from a minor player in his rise to fame. It wasn't through a series of coincidences or through fate that Washington became the very embodiment of the American Revolution and Federalist Era. Longmore argues that Washington had, in his youth, an insatiable lust for power...but would only seek to achieve it through socially respectable means (highly developed interpersonal skills didn't hurt, either). It is through an examination of what constitutes "socially respectable," Washington's writings, and examining the change in his tone as he matures that Longmore bases his premise. In my opinion, he does a very good job of it. His arguments are strong and backed up in an extensive end-notes section. The only problem I have with his research is that I would have liked to see Longmore's view on two major incidences that happened in Washington's early life and how they affected his rise to fame: the death of his older brother/patron Lawrence; and his marriage to the filthy rich widow, Martha Custis. In all, Longmore has written an excellent book that I would recommend to anyone who would like to begin a serious study of the early life of the "First in War, First in Peace, First in the Hearts of his Countrymen."

By the way, this is not a cradle-to-grave biography of Washington, but follows his life from birth until about the time he takes command of the Continental Army.

An excellent book on the origins of the Washington image
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-21
Paul Longmore's book, "The Invention of George Washington" is a wonderful book about the Washington that people have come to know over the years. Longmore looks at Washington's life chronologically and compares it with the image of Washington as the Father of Our Country. Longmore shows that one of the most important people in shaping this image was George Washington himself. Washington was constantly concerned with what others thought of him. He always lived his life as if he were on a stage with the whole world was watching. At many of these points, they were watching. Washington was setting the model for future leaders of the United States as Commander-in-Chief, and ultimately as President. Behind this image of a man doing the best for his country, however, is a man of ambition. Especially as a young man during his days commanding Virginia troops in the French and Indian war, Washington strived for recognition among his fellow colonists and from the British regulars that he was forced to serve under. As Washington matured, he was more successful at curbing this ambition. It was during these years that Washington built his reputation and became known as the Father of Our Country.

Virginia
Jim Limber Davis: A Black Orphan in the Confederate White House
Published in Hardcover by Pelican Publishing Company (2007-05-01)
Author: Rickey Pittman
List price: $15.95
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Collectible price: $17.50

Average review score:

A love story in the midst of war.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-05
I found myself to be on a rollercoaster of emotions while reading about Jim Limber Davis. I was angered by his abuse; I found myself smiling as I read about his adventures with the Davis family and was saddened when he was abducted. The illustrations are incredible and bring the story to life. I look forward to hearing my grandchildrens reviews about the mysterious story of Jim Limber.

This glimpse of a largely unknown and unseen side of the Confederate White House.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-06
Award-winning author Rickey Pittman presents Jim Limber Davis: A Black Orphan in the Confederate White House, a children's picturebook revealing the amazing true story of a young black boy rescued from his cruel guardian by Varina Davis, wife of Confederate President Jefferson Davis. Jefferson Davis registered Jim as a free black child and became his guardian; Jim was treated well and enjoyed happy times in the Confederate white house during the civil war. Yet when the Union won, Jefferson Davis was imprisoned and Jim Limber was taken away by Union soldiers. Jim Limber was displayed as a "slave" of Jefferson Davis, though he tried to protest that the scars inflicted upon him were from his first master, not from the former Confederate President. By the time Jefferson Davis was freed from prison, Jim Limber had disappeared, never to be heard from again - what happened to him remains a mystery to this day. Earthy illustrations by arts teacher Judith Hierstein add a complementary touch to this glimpse of a largely unknown and unseen side of the Confederate White House.

About Time
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-01
It is about time someone wrote about this tragic little boy. I have told this story to incredulous listeners for years. I am overjoyed to think that now more people will know this little boy's name and probable fate. A great Christmas gift with excellent art work and lively, readable text.

Virginia
Joseph Vick of Lower Parish, Isle of Wight County, Virginia and His Descendants (Volume I)
Published in Hardcover by Genus Publishing (2004)
Author:
List price:

Average review score:

Word Just Fail Me
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-25
Jean Smokey Baker. Words just fail me to tell you how PLEASED I am with the first Volume of the JVFOA. It is soooooo beautifully done...the documentation on the pages is just something very special. I only have a small window to peek into as to all the work that you have accomplished to make this such a special book.

I am Overwhelmed
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-25
I am overwhelmed. This is such a beautiful book!! I couldn't believe that you all had been able to secure something of this quality for the price at which it was offered. It is obvious that meticulous care was taken to select a fitting presentation for what is found inside.

As I browsed through, I began to realize the many hours that were devoted to the production of such a book. I am in awe that anybody would have the dedication & tenacity to finish a work such as this.

I hold it and feel the family connection. This is truly something you both can be proud of. The entire family owes you a great debt of gratitude. Vickie Campos.

Thank You, Thank You
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-25
Thank you, thank you for the time, effort and expertise you have exerted to put out this book. It is a wonderful gift to have and to hold, and I shall treasure it, use it, enjoy it, and pass it on to my daughter and granddaughter. This is my legacy to them--our family history as you have compiled it--correct and professional in every way. Lorrayne Vick Donnell

Virginia
Katherine's Wish
Published in Paperback by Wordcraft of Oregon, LLC (2008-08-01)
Author: Linda Lappin
List price: $15.00
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Average review score:

A Masterpiece!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-05
One would not have believed it possible for any author to crystallize the essence of the ever-elusive and mystically-brilliant Katherine Mansfield into a wholly accurate account of her final days within the genre of literary fiction. Yet, Linda Lappin has done it with grace, style, elegance, rivetting prose (at times so gorgeously poetic it rivals the great writing of Mansfield herself). Indeed, the entire aesthetic of the book is a work of art - from the cover art, layout to the last page - all is so beautifully rendered. This book deserves recognition from the highest order from those with the clout to rank it among the best books written in 2008...or any time, readers are lucky enough to purchase a classic for all seasons. "Katherine's Wish" for that stature of her life and work is most certainly granted here.

Based on the true story of Katherine Mansfield
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-10
Based on the true story of Katherine Mansfield, "Katherine's Wish" is based on the final five years of her life. A dramatic retelling of a story about an artist oppressed by the odds, it gives narrative the chaotic last years of her life. Lappin draws from letters and other historical documents to bring the last few years of Mansfield's life into being, making "Katherine's Wish" an intriguing and highly recommended piece of writing.

Arts & hearts in motion, in orbit round a wish & a war
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-22
Linda Lappin has brought off, first, a moving fiction about desire. Her Katherine Mansfield -- yes, the great storyteller, one of the only writers Virginia Woolf claimed to envy, who lived most of her short life in England and died of tuberculosis (and a turbulent heart) in 1923 -- this reimagined Mansfield is on a quest with which anyone can identify. She's an ardent lover seeking same, and seeking more as well, and she achieves an ambivalent triumph, now here, now gone, and never quite what she thought she was after. The novel vividly renders the bewildering rush of its heroine's declining years, a time of paradoxical flailing and accomplishment. It begins in the devastated final months of World War I, in a southern France on strict rations and stripped of healthy men, then moves through the writer's marriage, her late successes, and her commitment to the cult of the Russian mystic Gurdjieff, and in the process Lappin also brings to life a number of the literary sensibilities of the Bloomsbury circle, including Woolf and D.H. Lawrence. Through it all, Mansfield emerges ever more powerfully: a sensation, a tragedy, and a tempest of yearning.

Virginia
Know Nothing (Beulah Quintet/Mary Lee Settle, Bk 3)
Published in Paperback by University of South Carolina Press (1996-03-01)
Author: Mary Lee Settle
List price: $14.95
New price: $4.95
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Average review score:

Part of a good series.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-19
For some reason, my local library had all but this novel in Settle's excellent series. I've read The Beulah Quintet twice now and find the books rich and well written.

Book III of the Beulah Quintet
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-21
Novel set just before the Civil War and tells the tragic tale of Peregrine Catlett and his second son, Johnny. As Peregrine considers freeing his slaves, he realizes all his children have left, and he feels there's no recourse but to remain a slaveholder. Tied by a special bond to the land, Johnny returns, but only until the outbreak of war, when he joins the Confederate forces. But he loses sight of his reasons for joining the war...and ends up fighting both family and friends with disastrous results.

Septuagenarian author tells it how it was/is.
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 1997-09-16
I had vainly considered myself to be fairly knowledgable about current American writers until that beautiful Sunday morning of 7 September 97 when I turned to the Book World section of my Washington Post and read an essay written by a septuagenarian author named Mary Lee Settle. She told it like it is, revealing how the literary marketplace of modern-day America has slid into a disgraceful period of not publishing unless it has a virtual guarantee of profit. Their business theory: only young writers can bring us a long stream of profit. I read her personal revelations with interest, likening them to my own experiences. For I, decades ago, had four hardcover trade books published by three different,notable publishers, and now - after a hiatus self-imposed in order to make myself financially secure - was finding it difficult to get published again. My age?

"Who is this woman?" I asked myself. "Her statements," I know, "are nothing but the truths. She tells it like it is. How refreshing!"

Then, on the subsequent Sunday, I was joyriding around on the net, accessed Amazon.com, and saw that this lady who was apparently considered "over-the-hill" had 39 - yes, 39! - books listed.

How could I not have read her? "I must correct my deficiencies," I told my deficiencies," I told myself. So, I scanned up-and-down, perusing the titles of her 39 entries. So many made the decision hard. Probably because I am, as she, a native Virginian and had just returned from a short vacation exploring the back roads of West Virginia, I chose her "Know Nothing" - a book billed as a novel that is a history of the western part of the State of Virginia, just prior to the Civil War and that land subsequently becoming the State of West Virginia.

I found it to be more than a history. I marveled at its rare eloquence; the conversations of Blacks with Blacks, Blacks with white people, and white people about Blacks. The vernacular and patois were perfect. Except, true to the actual;ity of that era, the term 'Black' was never used. It had not been invented at that time. It was always 'nigger' - a designation then, of itself, mot bearing any rancor or disrespect.

Soon, I was in love again. I saw that there existed out there, somewhere in the netherland of authors personally undiscovered, a will-o'the wosp who eluded me. She piqued my imagination. She of the intriguingly-beguiling persona - a mature person of the same generation as I, who had been blessed with the gift of verbally portraying people and events as they really were. I must meet her, I thought. She lives in Charlottesville, only about a 2-hour drive from my home in Fairfax.

Then, after the impetuosity of initial fascination wore off, I realized I am still in love with love. It would be best for us to never meet. What if a faux pas were to burst my bubble? I have found that the older one gets the more he or she needs a visionary shelter, a person who serves as an icon of one's dreams. That is the raison d'etre' of writers; to be the untouchable cloud in a heaven of imagination.

I recommend this vintage book to any and all, especially the current generation of "people of color."

Virginia
The Last to Die: A Story of War in the Carolinas and Virginia
Published in Paperback by Jarrett Press Publications (2000-12)
Author: Graham K. Strickland
List price: $17.95
New price: $14.54
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Collectible price: $18.00

Average review score:

The Last To Die
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-27
I felt I was reading a history book instead of a novel. The epilogue summarizes the causes of the war the carpetbaggers and scallywags will not admit.

the last to die by graham k strickland- a review
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-15
After reading The Battle of Bentonville and the biography of Gen. Robt. Hoke, this historical novel puts a gripping personal and realistic touch on this period. It makes it easy to tdentify with the trials and hardships endured by the people of eastern North Carolina during the civil war. The book is a wonderful supplement to the historical accounts.

Reader Comments
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-25
"Great book!I haven't had time to read it until now, but once I started I couldn't lay it down. The chapter on Battery Wagner was very good and at times I could almost smell the smoke." J.O., Dunn, N.C.

"You have mastered the art of keeping us history enthusiasts thirsty for details of every moment of the Civil War and entertained with a good story as well." B.A., Trinity, N.C.

"I really enjoyed your book and hated for it to end." S.C.,Tampa, Florida

"Your book was absorbing and I gained an entirely new slant on Civil War history. As I recall, the cotton tax was never mentioned in history books I read. To look at the conflict from that perspective makes more sense." A.N., Greenville, N.C.

"I normally do not read novels and I guess I am a stickler for hard core history. I began reading your book yesterday and couldn't put it down. The pages give life to both the soldiers and the loved ones left behind. You have done a great job of presenting the history of the 51st North Carolina Regimant while giving it life through the conversation of its characters. Your book will have a special place on my shelf. T.B., Columbia, S.C.

"This book is a treasure for the Civil War buff.... We hear the soldiers speak, as they must have spoken, on topics that range from concern for the crop harvest to their philosophical opinions as to the causes of the war." G.F., Shohola, Pa.

"You have captured everything I have ever read of wondered about the war in 329 pages." G.R., Sanford, N.C.

"So many times I have read novels thet were so far off historically that I could not enjoy them and I have read factually correct books that read too much like a battle report and bored me. In your book, there is a perfect combination of strong history and just enough fiction to make you come away feeling like you know the characters like old friends. I haven't enjoyed a book like this in a long time." L.S., Smithfield, N.C.

Virginia
Lee's Last Campaign: The Story of Lee and His Men against Grant-1864
Published in Paperback by Bison Books (1993-02-01)
Author: Clifford Dowdey
List price: $15.95
New price: $7.45
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Average review score:

Essential book on Lee and the Army of Northern Virginia
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-11
This is a very good book on the Overland Campaign of 1864. It is the story of the great campaign between Lee and Grant. The author writes very good character sketches of Lee, Longstreet, Ewell, and Hill. He also tells about the lower level officers of the Army of Northern Virginia. He does show bias against Longstreet who he does not think very highly of. Grant fans will not be too happy with some of the narrative. But it is a book about Lee and the Army of Northern Virginia not Grant and the Army of the Potomac. For the flip side of the coin I highly recommend Bruce Catton's "Surrender at Appomattox" which is an excellent account of the Army of the Potomac in these campaigns.

Lee and his CSA Army defeated by Jefferson Davis' strategy
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1998-05-03
An excellent work that in my opinion captures the essence of the Confederate failure. Dowdy debunks the myths of Grant the butcher and the subsequent "Lost Cause" explaination that the South lost the war due to the overwhelming superiority of Northern numbers, industry, weaponry and supply. Dowdy places the blame with Jefferson Davis, Braxton Bragg, the CSA War Department and to some extent on P.G.T. Beauregard. The decentralized defensive strategy adopted by Davis, led to the inability by General Lee and other CSA field commanders to sufficiently concentrate the forces necessary to defeat the Union armies.

Splendid History of the Last Year of The Civil War
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1998-04-04
The author writes a simply marvelous history of the great generalship of an almost god-like Robert E. Lee.
Read how sheer numbers, not superior leadership, allowed U.S. Grant final victory.
Although I think this book is out of print, I would highly recommend any history or Civil War buff to search hard for it. They will not be dissapointed.


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