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Hardcover A Blaze of Glory: A Novel of the Battle of Shiloh Book

ISBN: 0345527356

ISBN13: 9780345527356

A Blaze of Glory

(Book #1 in the Civil War: 1861-1865, Western Theater Series)

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good*

*Best Available: (missing dust jacket)

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Book Overview

In the first novel of a spellbinding new trilogy, New York Times bestselling author Jeff Shaara returns to the Civil War terrain he knows best. A Blaze of Glory takes us to the action-packed Western Theater for a vivid re-creation of one of the war's bloodiest and most iconic engagements--the Battle of Shiloh. It's the spring of 1862. The Confederate Army in the West teeters on the brink of collapse following the catastrophic loss of Fort Donelson. Commanding general Albert Sidney Johnston is forced to pull up stakes, abandon the critical city of Nashville, and rally his troops in defense of the Memphis and Charleston Railroad. Hot on Johnston's trail are two of the Union's best generals: the relentless Ulysses Grant, fresh off his career-making victory at Fort Donelson, and Don Carlos Buell. If their combined forces can crush Johnston's army and capture the railroad, the war in the West likely will be over. There's just one problem: Johnston knows of the Union plans, and is poised to launch an audacious surprise attack on Grant's encampment--a small settlement in southwestern Tennessee anchored by a humble church named Shiloh. With stunning you-are-there immediacy, Shaara takes us inside the maelstrom of Shiloh as no novelist has before. Drawing on meticulous research, he dramatizes the key actions and decisions of the commanders on both sides: Johnston, Grant, Sherman, Beauregard, and the illustrious Colonel Nathan Bedford Forrest. Here too are the thoughts and voices of the junior officers, conscripts, and enlisted men who gave their all for the cause, among them Confederate cavalry lieutenant James Seeley and Private Fritz "Dutchie" Bauer of the 16th Wisconsin Regiment--brave participants in a pitched back-and-forth battle whose casualty count would far surpass anything the American public had yet seen in this war. By the end of the first day of fighting, as Grant's bedraggled forces regroup for could be their last stand, two major events--both totally unexpected--will turn the tide of the battle and perhaps the war itself.

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Fiction Literature & Fiction

Customer Reviews

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The Battle of Shiloh like you've never read it.

Jeff Shaara’s A Blaze of Glory begins a four volume series of fiction novels based on the Civil War’s western theater. After writing both a prequel and a sequel to his father’s famous novel, Killer Angels, about the Battle of Gettysburg in the Civil War’s eastern theater, he moves westward. He begins this novel after the war has already begun in 1862 as Grant moves on Fts. Henry and Donaldson in northwestern Tennessee and then moves southward to Shiloh, which is the focus of this book. I prefer a good historical fiction novel that moves the story along through the dialog of its characters. However, the first part of this book reads more like a textbook, explaining to the reader the historical background to the events. He does so quite well, but it seems a bit out of touch with his other works. He also skims over the capture of those Confederate forts. I would have liked to have seen more character dialog from Grant and his gunboat captains as well as the fort commanders and perhaps less small talk later on and less historical description. He does raise the question about that great and bloody battle at Shiloh. Did the Union win the battle because of any decisive actions taken by them at the beginning of day 2 or did the Confederates lose that battle because of a lack of follow-up and indecision at the end of day one? Or did they lose it because of the death of General Albert Sidney Johnston? Which death was more costly to the Confederacy; Albert Sidney Johnston’s at Shiloh in the Western Theater or Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson’s at Chancellorsville in the Eastern Theater? Jeff Shaara makes you wonder. And then the book ends with a foreboding that yet even more of this horror is yet to come, but he does it in a most unique and imaginative way which I won’t spoil.
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