Twenty-five years ago, buoyed by the Bicentennial Spirit, I ventured in my Dodge Dart upon a nationwide odyssey of America, giving prearranged and impromptu readings from my fiction. Springfield, Illinois, was my first stop. Listening to the African-American guide in Lincoln\u27s house, I noticed a boo...
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...
Although a half-century separated us in age, when I was introduced to Webb Garrison, he remained ver...
Have you ever crawled inside a defunct forge and imagined working in that hell-hot, narrow space, gl...
This issue represents a milestone in several respects. I am pleased to announce that David Madden,no...
Review of: "Marching with the First Nebraska: A Civil War Diary," by August Scherneckau
Shelby Foote at the Cross Roads of Our Being The Civil War was the crossroads of our being as a nat...
Lincoln for the ages 45 years old, and still current I will cheerfully admit to a long, highly per...
For the most powerful Civil War memoir by a general, turn to President Grant. For the most distincti...
Fresh Perspectives on Civil War Study Placing Jefferson Davis and George Gershwin in the same volume...
An Interdisciplinary Perspective of the Civil War David Madden is one of the South\u27s most produc...
This summer marks Civil War Book Review\u27s second anniversary, which I might allow to pass unmenti...
Two segments included in this issue of Civil War Book Review directly address the fact that the Civi...
The Party May Be Over but the Celebration Has Just Begun February 12, 2009 marked the bicentenni...
Discovering New Civil War Genres Dear Belle: Letters from a Cadet and Officer to his Sweetheart, ...
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...
Although a half-century separated us in age, when I was introduced to Webb Garrison, he remained ver...
Have you ever crawled inside a defunct forge and imagined working in that hell-hot, narrow space, gl...
This issue represents a milestone in several respects. I am pleased to announce that David Madden,no...
Review of: "Marching with the First Nebraska: A Civil War Diary," by August Scherneckau
Shelby Foote at the Cross Roads of Our Being The Civil War was the crossroads of our being as a nat...
Lincoln for the ages 45 years old, and still current I will cheerfully admit to a long, highly per...
For the most powerful Civil War memoir by a general, turn to President Grant. For the most distincti...
Fresh Perspectives on Civil War Study Placing Jefferson Davis and George Gershwin in the same volume...
An Interdisciplinary Perspective of the Civil War David Madden is one of the South\u27s most produc...
This summer marks Civil War Book Review\u27s second anniversary, which I might allow to pass unmenti...
Two segments included in this issue of Civil War Book Review directly address the fact that the Civi...
The Party May Be Over but the Celebration Has Just Begun February 12, 2009 marked the bicentenni...
Discovering New Civil War Genres Dear Belle: Letters from a Cadet and Officer to his Sweetheart, ...
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...
Although a half-century separated us in age, when I was introduced to Webb Garrison, he remained ver...