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The Killer Angels
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Editorial Reviews:
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"My favorite historical novel...A superb re-creation of the Battle of Gettysburg, but its real importance is its insight into what the war was about, and what it meant." JAMES M. McPHERSON Author of BATTLE CRY OF FREEDOM Winner of the 1975 Pulitzer Prize for fiction In the four most bloody and courageous days of our nation's history, two armies fought for two dreams. One dreamed of freedom, the other of a way of life. Far more than rifles and bullets were carried into battle. There were memories. There were promises. There was love. And far more than men fell on those Pennsylvania fields. Shattered futures, forgotten innocence, and crippled beauty were also the casualties of war. Unique, sweeping, an unforgettable, THE KILLER ANGELS is a dramatic re-creation of the battleground for America's destiny.
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This novel reveals more about the Battle of Gettysburg than any piece of learned nonfiction on the same subject. Michael Shaara's account of the three most important days of the Civil War features deft characterizations of all of the main actors, including Lee, Longstreet, Pickett, Buford, and Hancock. The most inspiring figure in the book, however, is Col. Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain, whose 20th Maine regiment of volunteers held the Union's left flank on the second day of the battle. This unit's bravery at Little Round Top helped turned the tide of the war against the rebels. There are also plenty of maps, which convey a complete sense of what happened July 1-3, 1863. Reading about the past is rarely so much fun as on these pages.
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The Killer Angels
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User Comments:
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There is a Reason This Won a Pulitzer Prize
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It absolutely deserved the Pulitzer Prize it won in 1975. Shaara climbs inside the heads of the key playersparticularly Longstreet and Chamberlain. And then there is Lo Armistead who swore he would never fight his friend and soulmate Win Hancock, but ends up having to do exactly that on the final day. He is also exposed as a mediocre tactician whose great strengths are his character, his ability to inspire his men and his ability to act decisively. The depth of this relatively small historical novel is immense. But the book is so much more.
This is one of the very finest books I have ever read.in any genre. The narrative is simple but compelling. Through the British observer, Freemantle, the Southern cultural structure is observed as being very similar to that of Great Britain. Shaara examines Lee in considerable detailhis struggle with breaking his vows to the Union because he could not fight against his homeland (Virginia), his physical problems as an overworked fifty-seven year old man with cardiac problems and his deep religious faith.
Chamberlain is the Bowdoin college professor who volunteered for the war and found that, despite its horrors, he truly loves it. Longstreet, the old warrior who has inherited Stonewall Jackson's position as Lee's right hand, is a tactician far ahead of his time who has, for a variety of reasons, become somewhat jaded on life in general and on "the glorious cause" in particular.
First, it is a splendid overview of the Battle of Gettysburg. The sights, the sounds, the smells,the emotions.everything is portrayed in a narrative that puts the reader squarely in the middle of the battle.
In fact, Freemantle at one point envisions the Confederacy returning to the Queen if it were to win the war. The battle is explained with numerous helpful maps, and both the foreword and the afterword set the participants in their proper historical perspective.
From Buford's establishing the high ground, the armies converging on the previously inconsequential place, Lee overriding Longstreet's tactical advice, and Chamberlain's countercharge when the ammunition ran out to Pickett's ill fated charge on the final day, Shaara describes the battle in riveting detail. "The Killer Angels" is several books in one.
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Beautifully written and a joy to read
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This book's language is sweet, smooth-flowing, stunning in its simplicity and focus. The Battle of Gettysburg is well documented and has been written about since July 4, 1863.
but to someone unversed in warfare and battlefields, it brought home the bravery, certainty and uncertainty, fear, foolishness, conflicts, nobility, and humanity of the men struggling to survive the 3 days in Pennsylvania that turned the tide of the war. I want to learn more about Longstreet and Chamberlain particularly and want to see Gettysburg.
I loved the structure of the novel - alternating chapters among the key figures of the war - Lee, Chamberlain, Longstreet, Buford, Armistead, The Spy, Freemantle.
I'm not sure I could have appreciated this book at any earlier time in my life so am grateful that I've read it now. One of two books read in my entire lifetime that I consider a masterpiece.
I appreciated the maps, the brief biographical notes at the beginning of the novel and the afterward describing the principal characters lives after the war.
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Shaara gives us a study of leadership which gives us a personal perspective of courage and leadership. A must read for any Civil War buff. Union Colonel Joshua Chamberlain shows us a man of books thrust into war and how he handles a very critical moment when the fate of the battle hangs on what he decides. We witness Confederate General Longstreet struggle with personal tragedy and the curse of being strategically ahead of his time. programs have made Killer Angels a required text. Michael Shaara's magnificent historical novel on the Battle of Gettysburg is history at its finest. The study of leadership on both sides is of such quality that today many collegiate R.O.T.C.
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kids book, barely worth reading
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#2 - This is a poorly written piece of commercial literature. i recently read the killer angels again. i should have left my childhood affinity for that book alone. I read the killer angels and loved it. #1 - I get into the technicalities of military history and the importance of certain troop movements & fights, however i think some of the most important details are wrong, or omitted.
also, Herdegen has a brand new book out called "Those damn black hats" about the Iron Brigade at Gettysburg. The actions of dead Western (Midwestern) men mentioned briefly in this fictional story, were the reason many a Maine man survived to tell their tall tales. The dialogue is laughable. I recommend: The Iron Brigade (Alan T Nolan), In the Bloody Railroad Cut at Gettysburg (Lance J Herdegen), and Noah Trudeau's thorough chronological study of Gettysburg. Also the significance of Reynolds actions, the politics of rank between Hancock and Meade & him so integral to the Gettysburg story, are ignored as well.
just watched that again recently. everything bad and wrong about that book was magnified in the movie. the re-read was a disappointment for several reasons:. but i shouldn't have. same with movie Gettysburg.
For instance, I believe the significance of the Iron Brigade's fights on the first day were the fiercest and more historically important to the outcome of the battle than the other two days (just look at the 70% casualty rate). i should have left my fond memories of that movie alone too. Zoom to today. i liked the military history, but didn't know that the author's portrayal of history was indeed FICTIONAL. but it falls short of that by succumbing to the same old biases and embellishments that plague Civil War history. There's no real insight into any characters.
In comparison, to day 1 fighting, Chamberlain & the 20th Maine's fight was a skirmish. I know this is fiction, but really, it seems like it's trying to be historically accurate. granted i was twelve. i study the civil war in college now. I will give it two stars, only because there is still a soft spot for it in my heart, because i read it when i was young.
ugghhhh. i guess i wasn't into characters, and didn't see when they were poorly developed. Okay i got into the civil war when i was an adolescent i loved the ken burns book/documentary and glory. There are so many really touching, tragic & dramatic stories in Gettysburg, but this book focuses on few of them.
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I had to buy this book for AP US History and I don't regret it. This book is great. The point of view is that of the other person.
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