
Never Call Retreat
The Centennial History of the Civil War, Volume 3
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Narrated by:
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Nelson Runger
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By:
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Bruce Catton
The final work in this series begins in December of 1862. Four months before, the Union Army tasted long-awaited victory at the bloody battle of Antietam. Grant continued on towards Vicksburg, Mississippi. The grim battles that lay ahead would be costly: the Vicksburg campaign, Chattanooga, the Battle of the Wilderness, the Battle of Atlanta and the March to the Sea, the siege of Petersburg. There would be two and a half more years of war before Lee’s surrender at Appomattox, followed by Lincoln’s death just six days later.
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Mr. Catton was actually born in 1899 and as he was growing up he talk to people who had actually served in the war. He has a deep understanding of the sacrifices that the war placed on those who served and those who were at home. He combines this with a masterful skill at story telling to produce a wonderful history of the defining moment of 19th century America.
And his focus is not just on the tremendous battles of the time, but also how President Lincoln had to deal with the politics of winning the war and putting together plans for reconstructing the country once it was apparent that the Union was going to prevail.
You will be astonished at how quickly this book is finished. I highly recommend it.
The Final Phase and What It Means
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Civil War Classes Should Require this Book
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It's Message Still Relevant Today, Perhaps More-so
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the details
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Excellent
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The narration was good and ran at a good pace.
I tend to listen to most of my audiobooks 2 or 3 times or more and this I will definitely listen to the 3 books in this Series again.
Added Details
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This third book is an understanding of how the generals conceived of, prepared for and managed their battles. As such, this is the story of how Ulysses.S. Grant and William Tecumseh Sherman proved superior generals and how they became the Union’s war savers.
Most interesting here is how the obvious genius of Abraham Lincoln is portrayed; a man perceived as nothing much by his political contemporaries, yet, who proves to be a shrewd and insightful patriot of our nation and its laws.
Another major theme in this edition is the question of whether to provide emancipation. Not a simple concept in the 1860s. The complexity of the issues faced by the North were interesting. Yet, what was horrifying is that the debate seems never to involve the consideration that Blacks, are one in the same humankind, with the rest of the nation. Frightening to think we as a nation were so ignorant and held these unfounded prejudices.
Finally, this book teaches us about the futility of the battles that were fought attempting to bring about a win or avoid a war loss. Most battles ended in no resolution and too many deaths.
There are two superior ossuaries on the civil war. This three-book series and Shelby Foote’s comparative three book tombs, on the Civil War. Here you learn more of the politics. In Mr. Foote’s magnificent study, you learn of the war and its battles. Read either, read both. I think Shelby Foote’s is the far superior read and study. That is not to say this telling is not good; just not as good. Herodotus initiated humanity into the benefit of studying history. These two men, Catton and Foote, are the penultimate writers of history.
Why the North Won; Economic Power
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The Civil War
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FANTASTIC
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Bruce Catton achieves this at just about every point in the narrative, with every battle from Stones River to Cold Harbor recreated in engaging and illuminating detail.
Catton also provides precise and provoking insight into the minds of the politicians and leaders whose decisions shaped the course of the Civil War.
Learned Something New at Every Point
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