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Hardcover Grant Wins the War: Decision at Vicksburg Book

ISBN: 0471157279

ISBN13: 9780471157274

Grant Wins the War: Decision at Vicksburg

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Book Overview

Vicksburg is the key. . . . Let us get Vicksburg, and all that country is ours.--President Abraham Lincoln, 1862 In a brilliantly constructed and powerfully rendered new account, James R. Arnold... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Good Read on a Pivotal Campaign

Arnold's book about a pivtoal campaign covers many details on many overlooked battles and raids in the Civil War: Champion's Hill (Baker's Creek), Big Black River, Jackson, Port Gibson, and Grierson's raid through Mississippi.Arnold's descriptions of the battles were interesting with notes on individual bravery without becoming too bogged down in details. Particularly interesting were the descriptions of the Union army's march on the Louisiana side of the Mississippi River and the Union navy's several attempts to pass by Vicksburg's siege guns.I also appreciated the author's balanced criticisms of leaders on both sides: 1) Pemberton, the Confederate commander, was too vacillating and involved in the petty politics that doomed the Confederacy in the West. Conflict between Confederate leaders Johnston, Davis, and Beauregard further doomed Pemberton. 2)Grant made the inexcusable mistake of leaving his own wounded on the battlefield after a charge on the Vicksburg works because of his faulty perception that to care for his wounded would be an admission of weakness.My main complaints were the lack of sufficient maps - while the maps in the book were well-drawn and sufficiently detailed, more were needed, particularly for a campaign such as Vicksburg.In conclusion, I recommend the book as an entertaining and informative read on an important campaign.

A very goog Vicksburg compendium.

An excellent analysis covering the entire scope of Grant's tactical operations. However, this book reaches too far. Like the title, the author's military assertions and their subsequent impact on the Union's conduct of the war are a little too grandiose. Grant did not win the war on July 4, 1863. It would drag on for two more years. But just maybe Lincoln did.Grant's amazing victory was as much politically as tactically driven. From the point of view of Grant's career, he had to win, had to take unorthodox chances, because he was as close to being dead meat as any Union general ever came. For months and months he was bogged down before Vicksburg. We know Lincoln was so dissatisfied with Grant that he sent Charles Dana to Vicksburg as the President's special envoy to see what was really going on. General Banks, a Lincoln political appointee and very close friend, was driving north from Baton Rouge toward Port Gibson and Vicksburg. Banks stalled and Grant was ordered by Halleck (via Lincoln??) to assist Banks. Grant disobeyed this command from the then General in Chief of all Federal armies and went his own way. WOW! Big decision. What a way to make friends when you are under the looking glass.Last, placed within Grant's command structure is another Lincoln political appointee and friend, General McClernand, who Grant subsequently relieves prior to Vicksburg's capitulation. Is he thumbing he nose?At Vicksburg we see Grant's first inclination to tactically detach himself from direct supply and communication lines. But what caused it? Was it Pemberton's chauvinistic defense of Vicksburg and Grant's straight forward desire to defeat his foe? Or was it the internal pressure within the Union army and Grant's desire to save his career that forced Grant to do very, very differently from then current military principals, causing him to develop this amazingly different set of operational plans he would resort to again and again during the remainder of the war? Last, from the Confederate side there is Jeff Davis' incredible stupidity. Did Jeff Davis hang Joe Johnston out to dry? And lets not forget Pemberton's direct disobedience to his theater commander's, Joe Johnston's order: Save the army, abandon Vicksburg. Why did Jeff Davis never censure Pemberton not only for the loss of Vicksburg, strategically and psychologically important to the South as it was, but also the loss of an entire army, complete with thousands of men and irreplaceable stores, arms and ammunition? And why does Davis again relieve Johnston from command, not reinstating him until the final hours of the war? Seen simply from the viewpoint of the Union high command, i.e., a traitor in his midst (McClernand), a presidential spy at headquarters (Dana), an unwillingness to unite forces with a fellow field commander (Banks) and the disobedience of his direct superior's orders (Halleck's), Grant should be thankful for Lincoln's reaffirmed evaluation of him: "I cannot spare this man; he fights".

Well written and detailed.

Other than the fact you can never have too many maps this book was extremely well written. Great detail on brigade actions - specific but flowing pretty smoothly with the overall battle action. Really liked the summary analysis' throughout the book. Focused and, to me, impartial.

Good description and analysis of a great campaign

Arnold's story of Grant's Vicksburg campaign justifies the title: "Grant Wins the War." The author combines a solid factual recount with analysis and strategic discussions. The only complaint I had is that the book felt a little light in some areas. While significant attention was given to some aspects of the campaign, other parts seemed to receive a less thorough treatment. This is minor, however. The author covers all facets: the political situation, personalities, strategic considerations as well as military. Grants particular genius for winning in his era of warfare is plumbed in detail. An important addition to literature on the western war, which is still overshadowed by focus on the Virginia theater.The book elicits several fascinating questions. One which struck me was how Grant, who was taking great strategic risks with his army, still left actual battle fighting largely up to his subordinates (as did many senior generals in the war). He was a very cool and collected general for one who bore the weight of the war on his shoulders.

Excellent read

I very much enjoyed this book. James Arnold includes quotations from journals, letters and newspapers to add to the immediacy of his writing. The campaign for Vicksburg is laid out in detail, making the action easy to follow, but his style is never dull or tedious. And it is not just a narrative. There is lucid analysis of the strategies and actions of each of the major generals and political figures. I found the approach very even handed in its praise and criticism. I read this book over the course of 2 days because it was so absorbing (particularly since I live in Mississippi and I read during the time of the Battle of Champion Hill). Arnold's arguement that this was the decisive battle in the war is cogently argued, although I suppose it will be controversial, as everything about the civil war is.
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