Friday, October 12, 2007

the Civil War


I have undertaken to read the mighty The Civil War: A Narrative. It's a giant. Three volumes (thanks BMO) of hulking 800 page glory. I started it about, oh, 6-8 weeks ago, and let me tell you this: it's slow going. I'm only 250 pages into the first volume, "Fort Sumter to Perryville," but I thought I would share some of the lessons I have learned.
1) Lincoln was one badass son of a bitch. Most people kind of know this, but I don't think most really know quite how badass he was. Unafraid to sit back and take the heaps of criticism that he wasn't doing enough, making no public reference to the Confederacy (which would legitimate their existence), calmly seeing to the dirty business with confidence. He's quite the literary character.
2)Lincoln was one unapologetically emotional man, which makes me love him the more. On hearing the death of his friend Ned Baker in the war, Foote writes:
"Lincoln sat for five minutes, stunned, then made his way unaccompanied through the anteroom, breast heaving, tears streaming down his cheeks. Orderlies and newspapermen jumped to help him, but he recovered his balance and went on alone, leaving them the memory of a weeping president."
Is there any better image of Lincoln than as a president stumbling, weeping down the streets of the capitol. Love it.
3) Foote was one badass writer. See the above quote for evidence. There are so many names, locations, rivers etc. in this damn book, and I have heard of about ten percent, but Foote handles the narrative engagingly, and keeps you moving. Plus his writing is smooth and wonderful. Read the opening paragraph of the book for proof.
4) I kind of sympathize with Jefferson Davis. This is certainly something I did not expect, and I think is a testament to Shelby Foote.
5) Despite 4, the segregationists as a whole don't seem to have gotten a worse rap than they deserve. At least at this early second year in the war that I've reached, they're as reprehensible as you would imagine.
6) Ulysses S. Grant's real name is Hiram Ulysses Grant. His nickname at Academy was Uncle Sam, and when he recieved a congressional appointment, the papers took the initials and the document read Ulysses Simpson Grant. Grant never wanted to tangle with the red tape to change it. Weird.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

that's about how much of it i read. i'm planning to read it all...someday. but i too found myself weirdly attracted to jefferson davis.

Anonymous said...

awesome!
coincidentally i am reading
The Making of the Atomic Bomb
by Richard Rhodes, which is another enormous narrative history book of epic and also sweeping proportions.
(i think it says that at least twice on the jacket, epic and sweeping. Why do historical narratives need to sweep?) and its absolutely unbelievable. History books have always been interesting, but this fucker is actually enthralling and gripping, and full of dramatic arcana and the revelations of those arcana while also showing the currents that lead to now.

czf said...

i read history of the atomic bomb in college for my nuclear energy in the modern age class.
it kicks ass.