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The Longest Night: A Military History of the Civil War by David J. Eicher
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The longest night : a military history of the Civil War

by David J. Eicher

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66194,553 (3.45)None
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New York : Simon & Schuster, c2001.

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Civil War ( )
  IraSchor | Apr 9, 2007 |
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Wikipedia in English (134)

7th Ohio Cavalry

Abel Streight

American Civil War

American Civil War bibliography

Arthur Middleton Manigault

Atlanta Campaign

Battle of Antietam

Battle of Ball's Bluff

Battle of Belmont

Battle of Big Bethel

Battle of Brandy Station

Battle of Buck Head Creek

Battle of Chaffin's Farm

Battle of Chancellorsville

Battle of Chickamauga

Battle of Chickasaw Bayou

Battle of Cold Harbor

Battle of Corydon

Battle of Cross Keys

Battle of Day's Gap

Battle of Drewry's Bluff

Battle of Eltham's Landing

Battle of Fort Donelson

Battle of Fort Henry

Battle of Fort Hindman

Battle of Fort Pillow

Battle of Fort Sanders

Battle of Fort Stedman

Battle of Fort Sumter

Battle of Forts Jackson and St. Philip

Battle of Fredericksburg

Battle of Gaines' Mill

Battle of Gettysburg

Battle of Gettysburg, First Day

Battle of Gettysburg, Second Day

Battle of Glendale

Battle of Globe Tavern

Battle of Griswoldville

Battle of Hanover Court House

Battle of Harpers Ferry

Battle of High Bridge

Battle of Honey Hill

Battle of Iuka

Battle of Jerusalem Plank Road

Battle of Kelly's Ford

Battle of Lewis's Farm

Battle of Lookout Mountain

Battle of Malvern Hill

Battle of McDowell

Battle of Mill Springs

Battle of Mine Run

Battle of Missionary Ridge

Battle of Monocacy

Battle of Nashville

Battle of North Anna

Battle of Opequon

Battle of Perryville

Battle of Philippi (West Virginia)

Battle of Richmond

Battle of Savage's Station

Battle of Seven Pines

Battle of Shiloh

Battle of South Mountain

Battle of Spotsylvania Court House

Battle of Stones River

Battle of the Crater

Battle of the Wilderness

Battle of Totopotomoy Creek

Battle of Trevilian Station

Battle of White Oak Swamp

Battle of Yellow Tavern

Battle of Yorktown (1862)

Benjamin Huger (general)

Bryan M. Thomas

Carolinas Campaign

Cemetery Hill

Charles C. Walcutt

Charles DeWitt Anderson

Charles Ellet, Jr.

Charles Pomeroy Stone

Chattanooga Campaign

Colton Greene

Columbia, South Carolina, in the American Civil War

Conclusion of the American Civil War

Dix-Hill Cartel

Dixon S. Miles

Earl Van Dorn

Eastern Theater of the American Civil War

Edmund Pettus

Field artillery in the American Civil War

First Battle of Bull Run

First Battle of Fort Fisher

First Battle of Fort Wagner

First Battle of Kernstown

Gettysburg Campaign

Indiana in the American Civil War

Jackson's Valley Campaign

John K. Jackson

John W. Fuller

Kenton Harper

Knoxville Campaign

List of United States Military Academy alumni (Confederate States Army)

Little Round Top

Louis H. Carpenter

Marching Through Georgia

Maryland Campaign

Nicholas M. Nolan

Northern Virginia Campaign

Overland Campaign

Peninsula Campaign

Pickett's Charge

Pleasant J. Philips

Price's Raid

Retreat from Gettysburg

Robert Alexander Cameron

Samuel P. Moore

Second Battle of Bull Run

Second Battle of Corinth

Second Battle of Franklin

Second Battle of Petersburg

Second Battle of Ream's Station

Second Battle of Winchester

Seven Days Battles

Sherman's March to the Sea

Siege of Petersburg

Siege of Vicksburg

Stonewall Jackson

Tullahoma Campaign

Vicksburg Campaign

Western Theater of the American Civil War

Wikipedia:WikiProject Military history/Peer review/Battle of Raymond

William Quantrill

Wilson's Raid

Winchester in the American Civil War

Book description

Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0684849445, Hardcover)

The Longest Night by David J. Eicher aspires to become the standard reference in its field, and it very nearly succeeds. It is strictly a military history of the Civil War, which means it eschews all the political and social context setting that takes up so much space in James M. McPherson's heralded Battle Cry of Freedom (still the best single volume on the war) and focuses almost exclusively on the actual campaigns and combat. Eicher challenges a line of historians that includes Bruce Catton and Shelby Foote, whose own books on the war are classics. He is not quite as good a writer as either of these two, but he does bring something to the subject that Catton and Foote do not: An entire generation's worth of new scholarship. As Eicher himself points out, a big chunk of his sources only became available in the 1990s. This is not to suggest that he offers a dramatic reinterpretation. On certain fundamental topics he has familiar opinions: "I am convinced that the Confederate States of America could not have emerged victorious in the Civil War." Eicher can write with occasional verve, too. Of an obscure operation in New Mexico, he deadpans, "Though [Major General Harry Hopkins] Sibley's strategic goals were fuzzy, his military successes on the surface seemed pleasing, particularly to a commander who experienced much of his campaign under the influence of liquor."

Yet the real strength of The Longest Night is its intricate detail. Although few readers probably want to know how many different types of bronze smoothbore mortars were used in battle (11, according to Eicher), other facts and figures are fresh and fascinating: "Of the 246,712 wounded treated in Federal hospitals during the war, 922 causes were reported as traceable to wounds from edged weapons of any kind [i.e., swords, knives, and bayonets]. Most of those resulted from personal arguments or use by camp guards rather than by fighting on the field." The bulk of the book is chronological retelling of the war, starting with Fort Sumter and ending with the death of President Lincoln and the various Confederate surrenders. It is a strong entry on a subject that continues to fascinate readers everywhere. --John Miller

(retrieved from Amazon Wed, 06 Jan 2010 22:46:09 -0500)

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