Growing up as a young boy in Iowa and fascinated with history, I learned the simple version of the American Civil War. Additionally, I learned what I knew from a northern perspective. Not until I read fictional stories: Patricia Beatty’s Turn Homeward Hannalee (1984) and Harold Keith’s R...
The war after the war Capsizing conventional views of history The Civil War is one of the most deb...
Chronicling the Secession Winter Civil war histories come either in very long books, even series of...
The father of history, Herodotus, in The Histories, wrote so that human achievement may not become f...
Understanding the Civil War Experience The books featured in this issue of Civil War Book Review ca...
The Civil War and the Lives of Americans After reading the books reviewed in this issue of Civil Wa...
The Reality of the Civil War The Civil War Sesquicentennial provides us with the opportunity for rea...
Multiplying Perspectives from which to Understand the Civil War David Madden has enjoyed a long care...
The series of public service announcements, The More You Know, stresses the importance of education ...
Civil War historians spend so much of their craft on examining the minutiae and the nuts and bolts o...
Two segments included in this issue of Civil War Book Review directly address the fact that the Civi...
As we enter deeper into the Civil War Sesquicentennial, we become more fully aware of how little we ...
Though the temperatures outside fail to reflect it, summer is winding down and another academic year...
It has been a difficult time for the Civil War Book Review and the rest of the Louisiana community t...
Putting the Civil War in Context Context. Students of the Civil Warùand of any branch of history ...
Discovering New Civil War Genres Dear Belle: Letters from a Cadet and Officer to his Sweetheart, ...
The war after the war Capsizing conventional views of history The Civil War is one of the most deb...
Chronicling the Secession Winter Civil war histories come either in very long books, even series of...
The father of history, Herodotus, in The Histories, wrote so that human achievement may not become f...
Understanding the Civil War Experience The books featured in this issue of Civil War Book Review ca...
The Civil War and the Lives of Americans After reading the books reviewed in this issue of Civil Wa...
The Reality of the Civil War The Civil War Sesquicentennial provides us with the opportunity for rea...
Multiplying Perspectives from which to Understand the Civil War David Madden has enjoyed a long care...
The series of public service announcements, The More You Know, stresses the importance of education ...
Civil War historians spend so much of their craft on examining the minutiae and the nuts and bolts o...
Two segments included in this issue of Civil War Book Review directly address the fact that the Civi...
As we enter deeper into the Civil War Sesquicentennial, we become more fully aware of how little we ...
Though the temperatures outside fail to reflect it, summer is winding down and another academic year...
It has been a difficult time for the Civil War Book Review and the rest of the Louisiana community t...
Putting the Civil War in Context Context. Students of the Civil Warùand of any branch of history ...
Discovering New Civil War Genres Dear Belle: Letters from a Cadet and Officer to his Sweetheart, ...
The war after the war Capsizing conventional views of history The Civil War is one of the most deb...
Chronicling the Secession Winter Civil war histories come either in very long books, even series of...
The father of history, Herodotus, in The Histories, wrote so that human achievement may not become f...