America Goes to War
The Civil War and Its Meaning in American Culture
Bruce Catton


Wesleyan University Press
distributed by University Press of New England

1992 • 128 pp. 11 illus. 5 1/2 x 8 1/4"
History / American Studies / Civil War

$15.95 Paper, 0-8195-6016-2


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“Absolutely first-rate . . . some of the most perceptive material about the meaning of the Civil War ever published . . . No Civil War library will be complete without this fascinating book”—Omaha World-Herald

A fascinating study of the first modern war and its effect on American Culture.

“No historian, Union or Confederate, has succeeded better than Mr. Catton in describing the real ‘feel’ of the Civil War, and in recognizing the nature of its appeal for subsequent generations.”—Baltimore Evening Sun

“It was not at all a pretty war, Mr. Catton insists, but a grim, no-holds-barred struggle, the first of the world’s modern wars. It is this quality of totality that gives it its terrible significance.”—New York Times Book Review

“Stimulating reading for those who wish to explore the Civil War beyond the smoke of battle.”—Houston Post

Click here for TABLE OF CONTENTS

Books for College Libraries 1988


BRUCE CATTON was editor of American Heritage magazine author of the Pulitzer Prise-winning A Stillness at Appomattox (1953) and many other well-known books








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