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Rating: Summary: An excellent compliment to other Civil War histories.... Review: So I was in the 2nd book of Shelby Foote's 3 book narrative history of the Civil War when the battle of Gettysburg occurred. As happens with so many readers I became fascinated with the topic and had to temporarily postpone further reading of Shelby Foote's trilogy to drill-down into the battle of Gettysburg.For me this drill-down into Gettysburg amounted to reading a biography of Joshua Chamberlain of 20th Maine and Little Round Top fame and this book on the Civil War. This book provides excellent elaboration of this topic. It is filled with 1st hand quotations of a wide variety of people from generals, to privates, to cavalry, to citizens. The book provides balanced coverage of both Union and Confederate sides. And the book does a decent job of placing the battle in context of the larger war, although of course not nearly a deep and extensive lead-in as provided by Shelby Foote. I enjoyed this book. If I was reading just one book about the Civil War, this book is of course too narrow in scope. But if one is reading many books on the topic, then this book provides excellent detail and insight into one of the most important and interesting battles of the Civil War.
Rating: Summary: An excellent compliment to other Civil War histories.... Review: So I was in the 2nd book of Shelby Foote's 3 book narrative history of the Civil War when the battle of Gettysburg occurred. As happens with so many readers I became fascinated with the topic and had to temporarily postpone further reading of Shelby Foote's trilogy to drill-down into the battle of Gettysburg. For me this drill-down into Gettysburg amounted to reading a biography of Joshua Chamberlain of 20th Maine and Little Round Top fame and this book on the Civil War. This book provides excellent elaboration of this topic. It is filled with 1st hand quotations of a wide variety of people from generals, to privates, to cavalry, to citizens. The book provides balanced coverage of both Union and Confederate sides. And the book does a decent job of placing the battle in context of the larger war, although of course not nearly a deep and extensive lead-in as provided by Shelby Foote. I enjoyed this book. If I was reading just one book about the Civil War, this book is of course too narrow in scope. But if one is reading many books on the topic, then this book provides excellent detail and insight into one of the most important and interesting battles of the Civil War.
Rating: Summary: Not bad but only for real Civil War buffs. Review: The use of actual witness accounts is an interesting technique but it creates a read which is not vey focused. Each witness, telling their own part of the grand story, takes it in their own direction. The result is a lot of tangents that make it difficult to focus on the details of the battle. This should be the fourth or fifth book on Gettysburg you read, not the first.
Rating: Summary: Enjoyable & Easy To Read Account Of This Famous Battle Review: This book offers an interesting account of the Battle of Gettysburg as seen through the eyes of participants, both North & South, and civilian witnesses like towns folk and such. Not a detailed account of the battle but certianly a very easy to read and enjoyable (if you can say such about a terrible battle) story about this period of history. The use of first person accounts/recollections fits in with the historical narrative of the author which makes this book a pleasure to read.
Rating: Summary: Enjoyable & Easy To Read Account Of This Famous Battle Review: This book offers an interesting account of the Battle of Gettysburg as seen through the eyes of participants, both North & South, and civilian witnesses like towns folk and such. Not a detailed account of the battle but certianly a very easy to read and enjoyable (if you can say such about a terrible battle) story about this period of history. The use of first person accounts/recollections fits in with the historical narrative of the author which makes this book a pleasure to read.
Rating: Summary: Captivating Eyewitness Accounts, Superb Historical Narrative Review: Witness to Gettysburg is superb history. Richard Wheeler has masterfully woven eyewitness accounts of the Gettysburg campaign into a remarkable tapestry, an evocative and haunting image of the most decisive battle of the Civil War.
Witness to Gettysburg is gripping narrative. Wheeler adroitly transitions from one account to another, from union soldier to confederate rebel, from army professionals to inexperienced civilians, from contemporary writings to memoirs penned years later. Wheeler maintains the intense drama of Gettysburg through careful selections, skillful editing, and his own insightful perspectives. Factual errors are corrected with unobtrusive comments in parenthesis.
Richard Wheeler's narrative account of Gettysburg compares favorably with the works of Shelby Foote, James M. McPherson, and Bruce Catton. Whether Witness to Gettysburg is your first reading on Gettysburg, your second, or your tenth, this exceptional compilation of eyewitness accounts will not disappoint you.
Witness to Gettysburg was originally published in 1987 by HarperCollins Publishers and reprinted in 1994 by The Blue and Grey Press. Although somewhat grainy, the more than fifty black and white illustrations are a valuable addition.
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