I Rode with Stonewall
By Henry Kyd Douglas
Edited by Fletcher M. Green
414 pp., 6 x 9, 12 halftones, 1 maps, bibl., index
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Paperback ISBN: 978-1-4696-0992-8
Published: August 2013 -
Large Print ISBN: 978-0-8078-6611-5
Published: June 2010 -
E-book EPUB ISBN: 978-0-8078-6665-8
Published: November 2000 -
E-book PDF ISBN: 979-8-8908-7280-7
Published: November 2000
Buy this Book
- Paperback $32.95
- Large Print $60.00
- E-Book $19.99
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About the Author
The youngest member of Stonewall Jackson's staff during the Civil War, Henry Kyd Douglas later became a prominent figure in legal, political, and military circles of Maryland. He died in 1903.
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Reviews
"I have read many novels about the war between the states, and some histories; never that I can recall, have I read any narrative that gave me a keener sense of what it was like, day by day, in the army than does Henry Kyd Douglas’s I Rode with Stonewall."—Lewis Gannett, New York Herald Tribune
"There are no heroics and unreconstructed-rebel sighs in the book; it is a simple and vivid record of day-by-day events. . . . For those who like to read about the war as it was instead of as it might have been, Douglas, born a hundred years ago this year, is this year's man."—Ralph Thompson, New York Times
"A new mine of information about the immortal Stonewall. . . . The most interesting memoir of the Confederacy that has come out in a long time."—H. J. Eckenrode, Richmond Times-Dispatch
"More interested in the human side of the war than the technical or military. . . . Indeed, Colonel Douglas strikes a modern note in his handling of his story. He focuses on the humor and pathos with a telling that would equal the camp fire candor of army life today. From John Brown's raid to the trial of Mary E. Surratt, it is a story of tender emotions, gallant riders, dashing young officers and their loyal soldiers."—Thomas Ripley, Atlanta Journal
"A thrilling story of the War of the Sixties."—Carroll Dulaney, Baltimore News Post
"A fortunate addition to the works on the Confederacy's loved general, and a particularly readable and invigorating picture of the times . . . A colorful account, full of the youngness, the rawness, and the bravery of the Southern army. . . . He has written as he lived and fought, earnestly, actively; and with an honest brand of romanticism."--Malcolm Bell, Jr., Savannah News