18 of 23 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars
Ennui, Nov 16 2006
By Joseph Haschka - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Chickamauga: And Other Civil War Stories (Paperback)
I finished CHICKAMAUGA several days ago. Since then, I've been unable to whip-up enough mental energy to give it either an emphatic thumbs-up or thumbs-down. I guess you could say it's so-so. And writing the review approaches being a chore.
Except for the first and last chapters, which I'll get to in a moment, these stories of the Civil War come from the point of view of the common man and woman, whether he or she be either a soldier in battle or a civilian caught up in the collateral damage.
The first chapter is the inaugural address of Jefferson Davis at Montgomery, AL on February 18, 1861. The last chapter is Abraham Lincoln's second inaugural address of March 4, 1865. The two serve as bookends to what comes in between, but it's hard to care (despite whatever eloquence the two have to offer.)
As with most collections of short stories, these run the gamut from better to worse than average, and the two extremes cancel each other to result in my overall lassitude concerning the whole.
Perhaps the best chapter is by, no surprise, Mark Twain: "The Private History of A Campaign That Failed" - an account of his time as a civilian irregular in Missouri at the outbreak of the war playing at soldier with a bunch of his buds, and who did more retreating in the face of real and imagined enemies than advancing to the sounds of battle. It incorporates Twain's characteristically wry, self-effacing humor, which, to me, made it the most readable of the lot.
Perhaps the least deserving chapter is one by Stephen Vincent Benet: "Fish-Hook Gettysburg", a 25-page free verse summary of the event. There are so many excellent prose accounts of this decisive encounter that my reaction was "why bother?". The battle deserves better treatment.
Another good one was the chapter entitled "The Night of Chancellorsville", in which a young prostitute, Nora, and a bevy of co-workers, while aboard a train on its way to Fightin' Joe Hooker's HQ at Chancellorsville, where they'll show the general and his staff a good time, are almost captured by the Confederates during the subsequent Federal rout. The story has an aspect of cleverness, at least. The prospect of capture by the Rebs causes Nora to think:
"... the Rebs would capture us and send us down to one of those prisons you hear about where they starve you to death unless you sing Dixie all the time and kiss (un-PC word for Blacks)."
One that I found particularly annoying was "The Burning" by Eudora Welty. Here, Southern belles, sisters Theo and Myra, are alone with their slaves on their plantation near Jackson, MS. After a band of Northern soldiers comes through raping and burning, the survivors straggle to tragic ends. At least I think so. Reading the story was like looking at something through a fine gauze mesh; all was slightly out of focus.
I consider the late Shelby Foote one of the greatest U.S. Civil War historians; his monumental trilogy on the subject is a must read. Perhaps I was seduced into buying CHICKAMAUGA when I noticed his name listed as the editor. Had I to do it all over again, I wouldn't.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars
Some of the best and the worst writing, Nov 4 2010
By L. Anderson - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Chickamauga: And Other Civil War Stories (Paperback)
I agree with the reviewer Joseph Haschka from 2006. I just happened to pick this book up at the library. I have been a Civil War buff since the age of 15, (50 years). I am a Southerner born and bred but have never felt sympathy for the Lost Cause theory, secession or slavery. Most of my family was what was known as home-grown Yankees though there were a few slave-holders mixed in, a typical Southern genealogy. This book of compiled stories from many well-known writers such as Stephen Crane, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Thomas Wolfe etc. shows that even the most popular novelists can sometimes fall short. I agree with Joseph that the best story is the one by Mark Twain, "The Private History of a Failed Campaign". When reading the stories, they portray a common misconception from the Southerner's point of view , i.e. that the damn Yankees burned everything in sight. It was not until I was over sixty and took my retirement years to actually tour the South that I found out that wasn't true.
I think the stories are worth reading if you skip the poor ones. But poor depends on each reader's personal assessment. As a consummate reader and fledging novelist, I can discern quality in writing. I would suggest the book for those interested in the literature of the Civil War. The stories I would recommend in addition to Mark Twain's is "Chickamauga" by Thomas Wolfe, "My Grandmother Millard and General Bedford Forrest and the Battle of Harrykin Creek" by William Faulkner, "Fish-Hook Gettysburg" by Stephen St. Vincent Benet (an epic poem) and "Pillar of Fire" by Shelby Foote.
I also agree with Shelby Foote in his Introduction when he says that "In this country, historical fiction has in general been left to second-raters and hired brains, and this is particularly true of those who have chosen the Civil War as a major subject".
As historical fiction is my writing genre, I hope that will be remedied over the next few decades as some are now trying.