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464 pp.: 1.25 x 8.43 x 5.58
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Custer The Controversial Life of
George Armstrong Custer
Jeffry D. Wert
$16.00 softcover
Custer : The Controversial Life of George Armstrong Custer
by Jeffry D. Wert
1.25 x 8.43 x 5.58
Custer The Controversial Life of
George Armstrong Custer by Jeffry D. Wert Balancing perspective that has given us an
historical Custer instead of a mythical Custer." James M.
McPherson, The New Republic
Wert draws on newly discovered materials, including letters between Custer and his wife, correspondence among Custer's friends and fellow officers, and archaeological evidence uncovered at Little Bighorn to present a fresh, often surprising portrait of Custer as Civil War hero, devoted husband, and brutal Indian fighter. of photos.
An admiring and dutiful account of the military exploits of the Civil War
hero and leader of the Seventh Cavalry at the ill- fated battle of the
Little Bighorn. Civil War historian Wert (General James Longstreet, 1993)
crafts a well-documented (at times excessively so) portrait of a boyish,
vain, unfailingly heroic figure who might never have graduated from West
Point had there not been a war. By 1863, however, Custer, then 23, had
attained the rank of brigadier general in the Union army, winning national
acclaim for his fearlessness in combat. A dashing cavalryman, Custer
earned the love of his subordinates and the enmity of many fellow
officers, a pattern that persisted throughout his soldiering life. While
Wert's voluminously detailed recounting of Custer's tactical heroics may
overwhelm nonCivil War buffs,, the author ably counters Custer's primary
identification as the tragic victim of 1876. Custer's long- suffering
mate, Libbie, is revealed here as a stout-hearted army wife, resigned to a
childless marriage (Custer contracted gonorrhea immediately after entering
West Point), uncomplainingly accompanying her husband to remote frontier
posts. Custer's story, as well as Wert's writing, gets more exciting as
the book approaches its inevitable climax. As the commander of the Seventh
Cavalry, Custer once more proved his mettle by battling the Plains
Indians, but his aggressive tactics, as Wert makes clear, finally spelled
his doom, as well as the deaths of 262 other soldiers at the hands of some
2,000 Sioux warriors. Lamenting the way in which the battle has since
obscured the life, Wert writes that Custer ``has become the singular
symbol of the nation's guilt over its sad history of continental conquest.
The loser at Little Big Horn has overshadowed the excellent Civil War
general." This accessible biography presents a much fuller historical
picture of this near-mythic American hero. (maps, not seen) (Book-
of-the-Month Club alternate/History Book Club main selection) -- Copyright
©1996, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
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