The Civil War a Narrative: Fort Sumter to Perryville - Shelby Foote Audiobook
Shared by:rmoor
Written by
Read by Grover Gardner
Format: M4B
Bitrate: 64 Kbps
Unabridged
Twenty years ago, in 1954, novelist Shelby Foote began this monumental work with these words: “It was a Monday in Washington, January 21; Jefferson Davis rose from his seat in the Senate…”
In the third and last volume of this vivid history, he brings to a close the story of four years of turmoil and strife which altered American life forever. Here, told in vivid narrative and as seen from both sides, are those climactic struggles, great and small, on and off the field of battle, which finally decided the fate of this nation.
“Red River to Appomattox” opens with the beginning of the two final, major confrontations of the war: Grant against Lee in Virginia, and Sherman pressing Johnston in North Georgia. While the Virginia-Georgia fighting is in progress, Kearsarge sinks the Alabama and Forrest gains new laurels at Brice’s Crossroads.
With Grant and Lee deadlocked at Petersburg, Sherman takes Atlanta assuring Lincoln’s reelection, together with the certainty that the war will be fought (not negotiated) to a finish. These events are followed by Hood’s bold northward strike through middle Tennessee while Sherman sets out on his march to the sea, to be opposed at its end by the ghost of the Army of Tennessee. Hood is wrecked by Thomas in front of Nashville-the last big battle and Savannah falls to Sherman, who presents it to Lincoln as a Christmas gift.
Meantime, Early has threatened Washington, Price has toured Missouri, Farragut has damned the torpedoes in Mobile Bay, Forrest has raided Memphis, and Cushing has single-handedly sunk the Albemarle. And Sherman heads north through the Carolinas, burning Columbia en route, while Sheridan ripsthe entrails out of the Shenandoah Valley.
Lincoln’s second inaugural sets the seal on these hostilities, invoking “charity for all” on the Eve of Five Forks and the Grant-Lee race for Appomattox. Here is the dust and stench of war, a sort of Twilight of the Gods, with occasional lurid flare-ups, mass desertions, and the queasiness that accompanies the risk of being the last man to die.
Then, penultimately. Lee at Appomattox, the one really shining figure in this last act.Davis’s flight south from fallen Richmond overlaps Lincoln’s death from Booth’s derringer, and his capture at Irwinville comes amid the surrender of the last Confederate armies, east and west of the Mississippi River. The epilogue is Lincoln in his grave: and Davis in his posthumous existence. “Lucifer in Starlight.”
So ends a unique achievement already recognized as one of the finest histories ever fashioned by an American a narrative of over a million and a half words which recreates on a vast and brilliant canvas the events and personalities of an American epic: The Civil War
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| Creation Date: | Sat, 03 Sep 2022 19:28:09 +0200 |
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| Comment: | Updated by History Audiobook |
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This post has 6 comments with rating of 3.7/5
September 3rd, 2022
One of the best overviews of the Civil War I ever listened to. It is an endurance test to get through all 3 volumes but you’ll be happy you did.
Thank you @rmoor for the contribution!
September 3rd, 2022
When Ken Burns made his superlative Civil War series, he wisely put Foote in it.
September 3rd, 2022
Thanks. I always enjoyed Shelby Foote’s writing.
September 8th, 2022
This guy worships Nathan Bedford Forrest and Mosby. Guy is a segregationist prick this series is barely history
September 23rd, 2022
Foote also admires Sherman and (above all) Lincoln. In fact, if he has one hero in the book it is Lincoln. He also has a a lot of time for Grant, in fact rather more than for Lee. Yes, he also admires Forrest as a military leader and does not gloss over his atrocities. I agree that he should have paid more attention to the black experience during the war. But this is an old fashioned narrative, written in the grand style decades ago. It’s not academic history and was never written as such and it is decades old now.
Foote was a southerner and he does have a wistful fondness for his own part of the country. But he gives loads of credit to the Union side where he thinks it’s due.
It’s worth listening/reading if you have the endurance. We’re talking 120-odd hours/3000 pages here. But it’s beautifully written, more like poetry than history. For pure history look elsewhere.
February 10th, 2026
Foote admires those that had an impact on that war. I’ve seen multiple interviews of him and he’s pretty even handed.
He simply calls out the talent.
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