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Books > Humanities > History > History of specific subjects > Military history
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Hardtack and Coffee; or, The Unwritten Story of Army Life, Including Chapters on Enlisting, Life in Tents and Log Huts, Jonahs and Beats, Offences and Punishments, Raw Recruits, Foraging, Corps and Corps Badges, the Wagon Trains, the Army Mule, The...
(Hardcover)
John Davis B 1842 Billings
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R959
Discovery Miles 9 590
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Civil War Witnesses and Their Books: New Perspectives on Iconic
Works serves as a wide-ranging analysis of texts written by
individuals who experienced the American Civil War. Edited by Gary
W. Gallagher and Stephen Cushman, this volume, like its companion,
Civil War Writing: New Perspectives on Iconic Texts (2019),
features the voices of authors who felt compelled to convey their
stories for a variety of reasons. Some produced works intended
primarily for their peers, while others were concerned with how
future generations would judge their wartime actions. One diarist
penned her entries with no thought that they would later become
available to the public. The essayists explore the work of five men
and three women, including prominent Union and Confederate
generals, the wives of a headline-seeking US cavalry commander and
a Democratic judge from New York City, a member of Robert E. Lee's
staff, a Union artillerist, a matron from Richmond's sprawling
Chimborazo Hospital, and a leading abolitionist US senator. Civil
War Witnesses and Their Books shows how some of those who lived
through the conflict attempted to assess its importance and frame
it for later generations. Their voices have particular resonance
today and underscore how rival memory traditions stir passion and
controversy, providing essential testimony for anyone seeking to
understand the nation's greatest trial and its aftermath.
Bletchley Park was where one of the war's most famous - and crucial
- achievements was made: the cracking of Germany's "Enigma" code in
which its most important military communications were couched. This
country house in the Buckinghamshire countryside was home to
Britain's most brilliant mathematical brains, like Alan Turing, and
the scene of immense advances in technology - indeed, the birth of
modern computing. The military codes deciphered there were
instrumental in turning both the Battle of the Atlantic and the war
in North Africa. But, though plenty has been written about the
boffins, and the codebreaking, fictional and non-fiction - from
Robert Harris and Ian McEwan to Andrew Hodges' biography of Turing
- what of the thousands of men and women who lived and worked there
during the war? What was life like for them - an odd, secret
territory between the civilian and the military? Sinclair McKay's
book is the first history for the general reader of life at
Bletchley Park, and an amazing compendium of memories from people
now in their eighties - of skating on the frozen lake in the
grounds (a depressed Angus Wilson, the novelist, once threw himself
in) - of a youthful Roy Jenkins, useless at codebreaking, of the
high jinks at nearby accommodation hostels - and of the implacable
secrecy that meant girlfriend and boyfriend working in adjacent
huts knew nothing about each other's work.
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