Longstreet
The Confederate General Who Defied the South
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- USD 16.99
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- USD 16.99
Descripción editorial
Winner, American Battlefield Trust Prize for History
Winner, Library of Virginia Literary Award for Nonfiction
Finalist, Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Biography
A “compelling portrait” (Jon Meacham, Pulitzer Prize–winning author) of the controversial Confederate general who later embraced Reconstruction and became an outcast in the South.
It was the most remarkable political about-face in American history. During the Civil War, General James Longstreet fought tenaciously for the Confederacy. He was alongside Lee at Gettysburg (and counseled him not to order the ill-fated attacks on entrenched Union forces there). He won a major Confederate victory at Chickamauga and was seriously wounded during a later battle.
After the war, Longstreet moved to New Orleans, where he dramatically changed course. He supported Black voting and joined the newly elected, integrated postwar government in Louisiana. When white supremacists took up arms to oust that government, Longstreet, leading the interracial state militia, did battle against former Confederates. His defiance ignited a firestorm of controversy, as white Southerners branded him a race traitor and blamed him retroactively for the South’s defeat in the Civil War.
Although he was one of the highest-ranking Confederate generals, Longstreet has never been commemorated with statues or other memorials in the South because of his postwar actions in rejecting the Lost Cause mythology and urging racial reconciliation. He is being discovered in the new age of racial reckoning as “one of the most enduringly relevant voices in American history” (The Wall Street Journal). This is the first authoritative biography in decades and the first that “brilliantly creates the wider context for Longstreet’s career” (The New York Times).
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This incisive biography from historian Varon (Armies of Deliverance) offers a fresh take on Confederate general James Longstreet (1821–1904), who was Robert E. Lee's trusted "war-horse." Rather than trod the usual ground of Longstreet studies—his renowned military command during the Civil War, including his generalship at the Battle of Gettysburg, where he argued against Lee's disastrous decision to attack the center of the Union line—Varon provides a thorough account of Longstreet's remarkable postwar political conversion from "ardent Confederate to ardent Republican." Inspired by his longtime friend Ulysses S. Grant, Longstreet joined the Republican Party after receiving congressional amnesty and, during Grant's presidency, inflamed former Confederates by supporting the Reconstruction Acts of 1867. In 1874, white supremacists attempted to overthrow the Republican-controlled Louisiana state government in New Orleans, but Longstreet led an interracial state militia that stopped the coup attempt. The backlash against Longstreet for firing on former Confederates was vicious, but the more "white Southern critics treated him as an apostate on the issue of race," Varon writes, "the more receptive he became to Republican ideology." Varon draws an intriguing parallel between this event and the Jan. 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol insurrection, and suggests the consequences of not punishing rioters can be irreversible. The result is a must-read for Civil War buffs that contains valuable insight on today's political polarization.