The Many Lives of John R. Kelso John R. Kelso led an unusual and tumultuous life: Methodist minister, later atheist, schoolteacher, enlisted man, spy, cavalry officer, master of hairbreadth escapes, and finally writer. This three-times married, bookish, opinionated, intrepid, and volatile man is ...
Fact and Fiction? Two Accounts of the Civil War Experience Boy Soldier of the Confederacy: The Mem...
Remembering the Experience from the Ground Up In the vast literature concerning the American Civil W...
Howard Bahr is already well-known to readers as the author of the acclaimed novel The Black Flower, ...
Anna Koivusalo examines arch-secessionist James Chesnut’s emotions in The Man Who Started the Civil ...
The Lives of Civil War Soldiers Civil War historiography is replete with edited collections of diar...
\u27War is all Hell\u27 The number of memoirs by Civil War soldiers runs into the tens of thousands...
Fighting for God The moral mission to end the sin of slavery In Diary of a Christian Soldier: Rufu...
More books have been written about the Civil War than any other event in American history. Of these ...
A Personal Look at War Lee and Jackson’s Bloody Twelfth is the third book in the University of Tenne...
Defining the Nature of Combat Like many scholars who study the culture impact of wartime violenc...
Robert Emmett Rodes strode across Douglas Southall Freeman\u27s Lee\u27s Lieutenants as if he step...
A Look at How One Man Survived the Horrors of War Silas W. Haven was part of Company G of the 27th I...
A Southern Unionist\u27s Story Part of the Civil War in the West series, A Thrilling Narrative: The...
Skillful Insight into the Life of an Ordinary Citizen of the Confederacy It is not often a book is p...
For the most powerful Civil War memoir by a general, turn to President Grant. For the most distincti...
Fact and Fiction? Two Accounts of the Civil War Experience Boy Soldier of the Confederacy: The Mem...
Remembering the Experience from the Ground Up In the vast literature concerning the American Civil W...
Howard Bahr is already well-known to readers as the author of the acclaimed novel The Black Flower, ...
Anna Koivusalo examines arch-secessionist James Chesnut’s emotions in The Man Who Started the Civil ...
The Lives of Civil War Soldiers Civil War historiography is replete with edited collections of diar...
\u27War is all Hell\u27 The number of memoirs by Civil War soldiers runs into the tens of thousands...
Fighting for God The moral mission to end the sin of slavery In Diary of a Christian Soldier: Rufu...
More books have been written about the Civil War than any other event in American history. Of these ...
A Personal Look at War Lee and Jackson’s Bloody Twelfth is the third book in the University of Tenne...
Defining the Nature of Combat Like many scholars who study the culture impact of wartime violenc...
Robert Emmett Rodes strode across Douglas Southall Freeman\u27s Lee\u27s Lieutenants as if he step...
A Look at How One Man Survived the Horrors of War Silas W. Haven was part of Company G of the 27th I...
A Southern Unionist\u27s Story Part of the Civil War in the West series, A Thrilling Narrative: The...
Skillful Insight into the Life of an Ordinary Citizen of the Confederacy It is not often a book is p...
For the most powerful Civil War memoir by a general, turn to President Grant. For the most distincti...
Fact and Fiction? Two Accounts of the Civil War Experience Boy Soldier of the Confederacy: The Mem...
Remembering the Experience from the Ground Up In the vast literature concerning the American Civil W...
Howard Bahr is already well-known to readers as the author of the acclaimed novel The Black Flower, ...