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"Your horrid war troubles anger me sometimes," the English social critic John Ruskin wrote a friend in the United States in 1862. "The roar of it seems to clang in the blue sky. You poor mad things —what will be-come of you?"
The story of what became of us during that conflict unfolds in the pages of The Civil War. From the dec-ades before the clash —when the issues that divided the country outiived every attempt at compromise — through the opening gunshot, to the somber field at Appomattox where men wearily laid down their arms and went home, this book chronicles the actions and passions of a people caught in the grip of history.
Róbert Paul Jordán, of the National Geographic's Senior Editorial Staff, and his family visited many of the Civil War arenas —the 200-foot blufFs at Vicks-burg, the rolling pastures of Gettysburg. They searched with a mine detector in Mississippi for Minié balls and spent a bright morning visiting Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor.
Author Jordán has a...
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Fülszöveg
"Your horrid war troubles anger me sometimes," the English social critic John Ruskin wrote a friend in the United States in 1862. "The roar of it seems to clang in the blue sky. You poor mad things —what will be-come of you?"
The story of what became of us during that conflict unfolds in the pages of The Civil War. From the dec-ades before the clash —when the issues that divided the country outiived every attempt at compromise — through the opening gunshot, to the somber field at Appomattox where men wearily laid down their arms and went home, this book chronicles the actions and passions of a people caught in the grip of history.
Róbert Paul Jordán, of the National Geographic's Senior Editorial Staff, and his family visited many of the Civil War arenas —the 200-foot blufFs at Vicks-burg, the rolling pastures of Gettysburg. They searched with a mine detector in Mississippi for Minié balls and spent a bright morning visiting Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor.
Author Jordán has a strong personal link with the war. His great-uncle, Leonidas M. Jordán, at the age of 17 enlisted in an Ohio regiment. His letters home, full of enthusiasm, pathos, and misspellings, add the humán factor to the statistics of warfare and bring to life the trials of the brave men who fought.
Woven into the accounts of the battles are portraits of the personalities and leaders of both sides: the mystical Lincoln, broodingin the White House, driven by a vision ofongnation; hard-drivingUlyssesS. Grant, attacking again and again, grinding down the Con-federate forces; Róbert E. Lee, brilliant commander of the Army of Northern Virginia, dominating the minds of his opponents.
A team of National Geographic researchers combed the Nation's libraries, museums, priváté collections, and century-old periodicals to find illustrations for The Civil War. Five paintings, specially done for this volume by artist Richárd Schlecht, present decisive battles with the smoke thinned away and every phase of the action clear.
Equally clear, from the author's sensitive retelling, are the agonies that the North and South both en-dured — the fratricidal bloodletting, the upheaval and despair —before the country could once again become the United States.
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