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The Killer Angels by Michael Shaara
Book Summary InformationAuthor: Michael Shaara Contributor: George Hearn Edition: Audio Cassette Audio: English (Original Language); English (Unknown); English (Published) Format: Abridged, Audiobook Published: 1997-04-01 ISBN: 1565111761 Publisher: Highbridge Audio
Book Reviews of The Killer AngelsBook Review: There is a Reason This Won a Pulitzer Prize Summary: 5 Stars"The Killer Angels" is several books in one. First, it is a splendid overview of the Battle of Gettysburg. From Buford's establishing the high ground, the armies converging on the previously inconsequential place, Lee overriding Longstreet's tactical advice, and Chamberlain's countercharge when the ammunition ran out to Pickett's ill fated charge on the final day, Shaara describes the battle in riveting detail. The sights, the sounds, the smells,the emotions....everything is portrayed in a narrative that puts the reader squarely in the middle of the battle.
But the book is so much more. Shaara climbs inside the heads of the key players--particularly Longstreet and Chamberlain. Longstreet, the old warrior who has inherited Stonewall Jackson's position as Lee's right hand, is a tactician far ahead of his time who has, for a variety of reasons, become somewhat jaded on life in general and on "the glorious cause" in particular. Chamberlain is the Bowdoin college professor who volunteered for the war and found that, despite its horrors, he truly loves it. And then there is Lo Armistead who swore he would never fight his friend and soulmate Win Hancock, but ends up having to do exactly that on the final day.
Shaara examines Lee in considerable detail--his struggle with breaking his vows to the Union because he could not fight against his homeland (Virginia), his physical problems as an overworked fifty-seven year old man with cardiac problems and his deep religious faith. He is also exposed as a mediocre tactician whose great strengths are his character, his ability to inspire his men and his ability to act decisively.
Through the British observer, Freemantle, the Southern cultural structure is observed as being very similar to that of Great Britain. In fact, Freemantle at one point envisions the Confederacy returning to the Queen if it were to win the war.
The depth of this relatively small historical novel is immense. The battle is explained with numerous helpful maps, and both the foreword and the afterword set the participants in their proper historical perspective. The narrative is simple but compelling. This is one of the very finest books I have ever read....in any genre. It absolutely deserved the Pulitzer Prize it won in 1975!!!
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