While offering original and perceptive insights into psychology, ideology, demographics, and economics, Keegan reveals the war’s hidden shape—a consequence of leadership, the evolution of strategic logic, and, above all, geography, the Rosetta Stone of his legendary decipherments of all great battles. The American topography, Keegan argues, presented a battle space of complexity and challenges virtually unmatched before or since. Out of a succession of mythic but chaotic engagements, he weaves an irresistible narrative illuminated with comparisons to the Napoleonic Wars, the First World War, and other conflicts.
The American Civil War is sure to be hailed as a definitive account of its eternally fascinating subject.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
October 20, 2009 -
Formats
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OverDrive Listen audiobook
- ISBN: 9781415944004
- File size: 480065 KB
- Duration: 16:40:08
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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AudioFile Magazine
Since audiobooks have no maps, understanding the American Civil War by ear can be difficult. However, author John Keegan gives his account more universal appeal with his inclusion of copious peripheral information about weaponry, supplies, transportation, and politics. His analyses of generalship and tactics come from an abundant curriculum vitae as a European war historian. Narrator Robin Sachs, also British, fits his task to perfection. His taciturn voice finds just the right efficiency, and he has no trouble pronouncing the numerous towns and rivers of the South. He lowers his volume before Gettysburg so as not to alert either army of the battle. Sachs's style never brings itself to the center of attention, instead allowing the details of the lethal conflicts to remain the focus. J.A.H. (c) AudioFile 2009, Portland, Maine -
Publisher's Weekly
May 25, 2009
American scholars tend to write the Civil War as a great national epic, but Keegan (The First World War
), an Englishman with a matchless knowledge of comparative military history, approaches it as a choice specimen with fascinating oddities. His more thematic treatment has its shortcomings—his campaign and battle narratives can be cursory and ill-paced—but it pays off in far-ranging discussions of broader features: the North's strategic challenge in trying to subdue a vast Confederacy ringed by formidable natural obstacles and lacking in significant military targets; the importance of generalship; the unusual frequency of bloody yet indecisive battles; and the fierceness with which soldiers fought their countrymen for largely ideological motives. Keegan soars above the conflict to delineate its contours, occasionally swooping low to expand on a telling detail or a moment of valor or pathos. Some of his thoughts, as on the unique femininity of Southern women and how the Civil War stymied socialism in America, are less than cogent. Still, Keegan's elegant prose and breadth of learning make this a stimulating, if idiosyncratic, interpretation of the war. 16 pages of photos, 12 maps.
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