Telling Tales Stories pivot around axis of Lincoln There was a time in American Literary History when most of the fiction about the American Civil War kept re-fighting the war from one or the other, more or less, jaundiced point of view. The result was a dead pile of second and ...
Lincoln and his Politically Appointed Generals The jury is still very much out on the long-stand...
One of the first and still considered one of the finest major Civil War novels, Miss Ravenel’s Conve...
Two books examine the antagonistic relationship between Clement L. Vallandigham and Abraham Lincoln,...
The Brutal Year of 1862 Certainly more books have been written about Napoleon than Abraham Linco...
Commander in Chief Lincoln Only in part because 2009 is the bicentennial of his birth, the hunge...
Multiplying Perspectives from which to Understand the Civil War David Madden has enjoyed a long care...
Approximately 65,000 books have been published on the Civil War plus another 16,000 on Abraham Linco...
Lincoln and the Military by John F. Marszalek Publisher: Southern Illinois University Press Retail P...
Abraham Lincoln: The Biography of a Writer By Fred Kaplan New York: HarperCollins, 2008. Among...
Civil War Books Not Yet Written Before we imagine books not yet written, I wish to say a few words...
A New Study of Wartime Washington Walt Whitman, one of the thousands of new residents drawn to Washi...
The war after the war Capsizing conventional views of history The Civil War is one of the most deb...
Understanding the War’s End William Marvel is a Lincoln Prize-winning historian of the Civil War. Wi...
Shelby Foote at the Cross Roads of Our Being The Civil War was the crossroads of our being as a nat...
Two segments included in this issue of Civil War Book Review directly address the fact that the Civi...
Lincoln and his Politically Appointed Generals The jury is still very much out on the long-stand...
One of the first and still considered one of the finest major Civil War novels, Miss Ravenel’s Conve...
Two books examine the antagonistic relationship between Clement L. Vallandigham and Abraham Lincoln,...
The Brutal Year of 1862 Certainly more books have been written about Napoleon than Abraham Linco...
Commander in Chief Lincoln Only in part because 2009 is the bicentennial of his birth, the hunge...
Multiplying Perspectives from which to Understand the Civil War David Madden has enjoyed a long care...
Approximately 65,000 books have been published on the Civil War plus another 16,000 on Abraham Linco...
Lincoln and the Military by John F. Marszalek Publisher: Southern Illinois University Press Retail P...
Abraham Lincoln: The Biography of a Writer By Fred Kaplan New York: HarperCollins, 2008. Among...
Civil War Books Not Yet Written Before we imagine books not yet written, I wish to say a few words...
A New Study of Wartime Washington Walt Whitman, one of the thousands of new residents drawn to Washi...
The war after the war Capsizing conventional views of history The Civil War is one of the most deb...
Understanding the War’s End William Marvel is a Lincoln Prize-winning historian of the Civil War. Wi...
Shelby Foote at the Cross Roads of Our Being The Civil War was the crossroads of our being as a nat...
Two segments included in this issue of Civil War Book Review directly address the fact that the Civi...
Lincoln and his Politically Appointed Generals The jury is still very much out on the long-stand...
One of the first and still considered one of the finest major Civil War novels, Miss Ravenel’s Conve...
Two books examine the antagonistic relationship between Clement L. Vallandigham and Abraham Lincoln,...