Andersonville
The Last Depot
By William Marvel
350 pp., 6.125 x 9.25, 32 illus., notes, bibl., index
-
Paperback ISBN: 978-0-8078-5781-6
Published: August 2006 -
Large Print ISBN: 978-0-8078-6615-3
Published: February 2010 -
E-book EPUB ISBN: 978-0-8078-6691-7
Published: November 2000 -
E-book PDF ISBN: 979-8-8908-6629-5
Published: November 2000
Civil War America
Buy this Book
- Paperback $34.00
- Large Print $60.00
- E-Book $19.99
- Audiobook
Awards & distinctions
1995 Lincoln Prize, Second Place Winner, Lincoln and Soldiers Institute, Gettysburg College
1995 Malcolm and Muriel Barrow Bell Award, Georgia Historical Society
About the Author
William Marvel's many books include A Place Called Appomattox, Lee's Last Retreat: The Flight to Appomattox, and The Alabama and the Kearsarge: The Sailor's Civil War (all from the University of North Carolina Press). He lives in South Conway, New Hampshire.
For more information about William Marvel, visit
the
Author
Page.
Reviews
"This well-written and readable monograph is more than a recitation of the facts. It is an analysis of the evolution and events of Andersonville, the most notorious prison of the war. Marvel's book is a valuable contribution to the historiography of Civil War prisons."--Historian
"Fine style: footnoted enough for the scholar, thoroughly readable for everyone else, and studded with lots of contemporary photos."--Kliatt
"William Marvel's Andersonville: The Last Depot appears to be the first history of the prison to take a genuinely objective approach to the question of how and to what ends Confederate authorities established and operated the prison. . . . He presents it in a fluid narrative. The pity is that . . . passions still run so high that in some quarters he will have no chance of a fair hearing."--Jonathan Yardley, Washington Post
"Readers will welcome this well-written, provocative narrative."--Choice
"An authoritative history of the camp. . . . A masterful job of historical detective work."--History: Reviews of New Books
"Succeeds in addressing significant questions in Civil War historiography and interpretation through vivid presentation of the lives and experiences of ordinary soldiers--prisoners and their captors. . . . A remarkable scholarly and literary achievement, a genuinely pathbreaking book that provides definitive answers to more than a century's worth of questions and controversy."--Lincoln Prize Citation