General Warren McCain wasn't a general-it was his given name. He was a sergeant in the Indiana cavalry, a working soldier who fought through some of the most pivotal and brutal campaigns of the American Civil War from 1861 to 1865. If you're drawn to authentic firsthand accounts of the Civil War-especially the cavalry operations and Sherman's March to the Sea-this memoir delivers the unvarnished truth from a man who lived it. McCain rode with General Judson Kilpatrick's cavalry division, known for their aggressive raids and relentless pursuit of Confederate forces. He witnessed the chaos of major battles, the grinding reality of campaign life, and the transformation of warfare during Sherman's legendary march through Georgia and the Carolinas-a campaign that broke the back of the Confederacy and redefined total war. What makes this memoir invaluable: Primary source authenticity: Written by an enlisted cavalryman, not an officer-McCain's perspective captures the experience of the common soldier who bore the weight of the fightingKey campaigns covered: Detailed observations from Sherman's March, cavalry operations in the Western Theater, and the final campaigns that brought the war to its conclusionUnromanticized narrative: No heroic embellishment-just honest recollections of exhaustion, courage, loss, and survivalHistorical insight: Every Civil War memoir adds another essential piece to understanding how the war was actually fought and experienced by those who were thereFor readers of Shelby Foote, Bruce Catton, and firsthand accounts like Co. Aytch and Hardtack and Coffee, A Soldier's Diary offers an authentic voice from the ranks-a cavalryman's view of the war that changed America forever.
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