Larry S. Chowning, Soldiers at the Doorstep (Tidewater, 1999) History is often best told by those who experienced it. Not everyone knows someone who knew someone who was alive during the Civil War. But Larry S. Chowning does, and he's willing to sit down and share a few tales with anyone willing to hear them.
The stories collected here aren't the tales of glorious battles, and you won't find much in the way of troop movements or political agendas here. Instead, you'll read about people whose food, livestock and silverware were stolen, whose men and boys were threatened with death or conscription, whose communities lived in fear. You'll read about people who sacrificed much to protect their children or strike a blow for their cause. You'll meet slaves who loved their masters as well as slaves who were abused by them. The great events and personalities that drive a war can be found in any number of texts. Much rarer is the human side of the story, and that is what Chowning captures here. His narratives are simple and easygoing, like a story you'd hear on a shady porch, spoken in a soft Virginia drawl over a glass of cold lemonade. This is a part of history that should be remembered, too. ![]() |
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