Published: 3/6/13Lincoln and Citizens’ Rights in Civil War Missouri (2011)By: Zach GarrisonCategory: Book Reviews As a wartime president tasked with holding together a country ripping at the seams, Abraham Lincoln sought and utilized every means of maintaining the Union. For this, Lincoln has often...
Published: 2/27/13African American Faces of the Civil War (2012)By: Glenn David BrasherCategory: Book Reviews When the movie Glory debut in 1989 it was not commonly recognized that African Americans had fought in the Civil War. Although many of the details were fictionalized, the film’s depiction...
Published: 2/27/13The Civil War: The First Year (2011)By: Brian Matthew JordanCategory: Book Reviews In his incisive 2005 anthology What Caused the Civil War?, Edward L. Ayers called on his fellow historians to challenge the simplicity and triumphalism of Americans’ “common sense” Civil War...
Published: 2/20/13Killing Lincoln (2013)By: Megan Kate NelsonCategory: Book Reviews The reviewer sits down on the couch. She picks up the remote control. It is 7:57 p.m. The docudrama is entitled Killing Lincoln, like the book upon which it is based....
Published: 2/13/13My Old Confederate Home (2010)By: Samuel B. McGuireCategory: Book Reviews Since Bell Irvin Wiley published The Life of Johnny Reb in 1943, historians have worked tirelessly to shed light on the lives of ordinary Civil War soldiers. However, because many studies...
Published: 2/6/13Joshua L. Chamberlain: The Life in Letters (2012)By: Thom BassettCategory: Book Reviews This collection of documents relating to the life and career of famed Union general Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain is both richly rewarding as well as enormously disappointing. First, the deep problems...
Published: 1/30/13Lincoln’s Hundred Days (2012)By: Stephen BerryCategory: Book Reviews “The Halls of Congress are like a dirty privy,” William Porcher Miles noted in 1858—“a man will carry off some of the stink even in his clothes.”1 As depicted in Louis...
Published: 1/23/13The Civil War in the West (2012)By: Jim DownsCategory: Book Reviews The Civil War West is quickly becoming all the rage, emerging as the theme of conferences, the focus of panels dedicated to new directions in the field, and even appearing...
Published: 1/23/13The Gentlemen and the Roughs (2010)By: James Hill Welborn IIICategory: Book Reviews Positing the Union army as northern society in microcosm, Lorien Foote argues for a vibrant culture of honor in the Union ranks. This northern honor operated along a sliding scale—from...
Published: 1/16/13How We Need to Learn to Stop Worrying and Love “Lincoln” and “Django Unchained”By: Christian McWhirterCategory: The Front Line Alright . . . historians, history buffs, and anyone who cares about history—take a deep breath and repeat after me: “It’s OK to love Lincoln and Django Unchained.” Why? Because they’re excellent—and I...
Published: 1/9/13The Fire of Freedom (2012)By: Donald R. ShafferCategory: Book Reviews A difficult scholarly challenge is rescuing from the dustbin of the past persons of historical importance, who for whatever reason have fallen into obscurity. This task is ably handled by...
Published: 1/2/13Django Unchained (2012)By: Megan Kate NelsonCategory: Book Reviews That Quentin Tarantino’s “Django Unchained” is the most effective depiction of American slavery in the recent history of feature films is somewhat surprising and deeply disturbing. The first scenes and...
Published: 12/26/12A Taste For War (2011)By: William KurtzCategory: Book Reviews Historians have long tried to capture the experience of the common soldier ever since Bell Wiley wrote Johnny Reb (1943) and Billy Yank (1952). Since then they have described everything from their views...
Published: 12/18/12The Iron Brigade in Civil War and Memory (2012)By: A. Wilson GreeneCategory: Book Reviews Few infantry units in the Federal or Confederate armies match the Iron Brigade in reputation or accomplishment. Distinguishing themselves at the Brawner Farm, on South Mountain, during the Battle of...
Published: 12/12/12The Great Heart of the Republic (2011)By: Megan L. BeverCategory: Book Reviews Adam Arenson’s engaging study of mid-nineteenth-century St. Louis is a story of national potential and national failure. Located at the intersection of North, South, and West, St. Louis requires us...
Published: 12/10/12Holiday Civil War Trivia Contest: WinnerBy: Matthew HulbertCategory: Book Reviews Trivia Question: A skirmish at this place on October 29, 1862, is widely regarded as the first time black troops in the Union Blue engaged in combat during the Civil War. Correct...
Published: 12/5/12Faces of the Civil War (2012)By: Allen C. GuelzoCategory: Book Reviews Ron Coddington’s Faces of the Civil War: An Album of Union Soldiers and Their Stories grew out of his interests as a photographer and a collector of Civil War-era cartes de visite....
Published: 11/28/12Lincoln (2012) [Take 2]By: Glenn David BrasherCategory: Book Reviews Movies can negatively shape popular perceptions of history. Birth of a Nation (1915) helped lead to the revival of the Klan. Gone with the Wind (1939) still shapes many peoples’ comprehensions of slavery. The...
Published: 11/21/12Lincoln and the Election of 1860 (2011)By: Daniel W. CroftsCategory: Book Reviews This volume, part of a series entitled “The Concise Lincoln Library,” focuses on Abraham Lincoln’s role in the momentous events of 1860—the Republican presidential nomination in May, and his subsequent...
Published: 11/12/12Lincoln (2012) [Take 1]By: Megan Kate NelsonCategory: Book Reviews It is long past time for historians to abandon the expectation that historical films will be historically accurate down to their most minute detail. Achieving this kind of authenticity is...