In this issue of CWBR, we continue our celebration of the bicentennial of Abraham Lincoln’s birth. The bicentennial year has prompted scores of historians to reassess the life of the sixteenth president, the world he lived in, and the nation he reshaped over the course of his presidential ad...
Commander in Chief Lincoln Only in part because 2009 is the bicentennial of his birth, the hunge...
Though the temperatures outside fail to reflect it, summer is winding down and another academic year...
Understanding the Civil War Experience The books featured in this issue of Civil War Book Review ca...
Two hundred years ago this month, our nation\u27s sixteenth president was born in a one-room log cab...
The Party May Be Over but the Celebration Has Just Begun February 12, 2009 marked the bicentenni...
Approximately 65,000 books have been published on the Civil War plus another 16,000 on Abraham Linco...
The past few years of the Civil War’s Sesquicentennial have produced a mountain of exciting works th...
A special spring season is upon us. As our readers have come to expect, the latest issue of Civil Wa...
No president has such a hold on our minds as Abraham Lincoln. He lived at the dawn of photography, ...
Once in a generation it seems, a historian writes a book that literally changes the landscape of the...
How Historians Remember the Civil War Many people tend to view Civil War commemoration as an almos...
The Brutal Year of 1862 Certainly more books have been written about Napoleon than Abraham Linco...
As we approach the Civil War Sesquicentennial, one begins to wonder how we can possibly find anythin...
As we enter deeper into the Civil War Sesquicentennial, we become more fully aware of how little we ...
Sesquicentennial commemoration all over the country, and indeed the world, draws to a close this sum...
Commander in Chief Lincoln Only in part because 2009 is the bicentennial of his birth, the hunge...
Though the temperatures outside fail to reflect it, summer is winding down and another academic year...
Understanding the Civil War Experience The books featured in this issue of Civil War Book Review ca...
Two hundred years ago this month, our nation\u27s sixteenth president was born in a one-room log cab...
The Party May Be Over but the Celebration Has Just Begun February 12, 2009 marked the bicentenni...
Approximately 65,000 books have been published on the Civil War plus another 16,000 on Abraham Linco...
The past few years of the Civil War’s Sesquicentennial have produced a mountain of exciting works th...
A special spring season is upon us. As our readers have come to expect, the latest issue of Civil Wa...
No president has such a hold on our minds as Abraham Lincoln. He lived at the dawn of photography, ...
Once in a generation it seems, a historian writes a book that literally changes the landscape of the...
How Historians Remember the Civil War Many people tend to view Civil War commemoration as an almos...
The Brutal Year of 1862 Certainly more books have been written about Napoleon than Abraham Linco...
As we approach the Civil War Sesquicentennial, one begins to wonder how we can possibly find anythin...
As we enter deeper into the Civil War Sesquicentennial, we become more fully aware of how little we ...
Sesquicentennial commemoration all over the country, and indeed the world, draws to a close this sum...
Commander in Chief Lincoln Only in part because 2009 is the bicentennial of his birth, the hunge...
Though the temperatures outside fail to reflect it, summer is winding down and another academic year...
Understanding the Civil War Experience The books featured in this issue of Civil War Book Review ca...