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By far the best history of the Spanish Civil War
Best single-volume study of Republic and Civil War

Exquisite Postmodern Critique of Celebrity-hood
Brilliant!

Overwhelming!!
Great big reference book

Gos Speaks Through His Weakest Vessels
Great!

Stonewall
I learned more about him from the book then my history books

Definitive Account of the Army of the Valley, Summer of '62
A detailed analysis of Stonewall Jackson's Valley Campaign

A Great Read
A window into a world gone byThe stories are brief enough to read aloud---and deep enough to read again and again with pleasure.


Exceptional Book
Large detailed diagrams, photos, realistic illustrations

Story of Christmas with its own Advent Calendar
Excellent Way to Share Advent with the Family

GONE BUT NOT FORGOTTENOn November 19, 1863 from an excerpt of his famous address at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania then President Abraham Lincoln, spoke the following words: "The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here; while it can never forget what they did here". Further Lincoln gave this tribute, "...that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion-that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain-that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom-and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth."
Now nearly 140 years later, Rex Jackson continues fulfilling Lincoln's prophesy once again and takes the reader on a compassionate and tactile journey of "these honored dead" of the Civil War aboard the Sultana steamboat. Jackson comments, "And, even though the circumstances surrounding the loss of the Sultana and its many victims would, for some strange unsympathetic reason, cause it to become a mere footnote in American history, it would nevertheless continue to whisper its ghastly experience of this human drama" (p.38). Jackson remembers these almost forgotten heroes, having escaped the hells of the Civil War and the ravages of "putrid conditions" (p.18) of prison camps, survived only to face yet more tragedy.
As boilers exploded on the Sultana, unsuspecting passengers, including about 1800 weary war veterans, were violently shaken at 2:00 A.M. into an unwelcome battle for their lives. Jackson describes the scene: "By dawn's early morning light, the once grand side wheel steamer Sultana, now a fiery furnace of human cremation, slipped under the surface of the mighty Mississippi River just north of Mound City, Arkansas, and disappeared from sight". (p.44).
Fate was lurking. Just as that night in 1912 aboard the Titanic, no one could fathom the unthinkable events about to unfold on the Sultana. This book will captivate your attention and interest all the way. With a punch of comparison to the Titanic tragedy, I could experience the historic events developing, as Jackson graphically detailed this long overdue homage to those honored dead of "The Sultana Saga: The Titanic of the Mississippi."
Because of its historical value, I truly hope to see this book take its place with other honored Civil War memorabilia and also on the shelves of school, university, and public libraries. This book screams for an adaptation onto film.
Forgotten Patriots