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8 Reviews
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20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
By far the most trustworthy book on Custer.,
By alex@v-town.com (Warrenton, OR) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Custer Myth (The Custer Library) (Hardcover)
By far the best of the vast Custer literature. Graham gathers together in one place primary data and lets you draw your own conclusions. On Custer, Graham is the only author I have read who writes without massaging his data to support some preconcieved theory. This book, incidently, was published in 1953, not in 1993.(It would be helpful if Amazon would note first copyright dates in book listings.) This book was not bashed out to meet a schedule or catch a market window; Graham gathered data literally for decades. Being an army officer-- Judge Advocate Corp--gave him access to files and access to survivors who were eyewitnesses to the fight at Reno's end of the field.
18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Invaluable resource for the Little Bighorn enthusiast,
By A Customer
This review is from: Custer Myth (The Custer Library) (Hardcover)
Perhaps this collection suffers a bit from attempting to be
all inclusive, but one can forgive the editor for this
failing. Col. W.A.Graham, one of the foremost Custer
scholars of his generation, was a retired Army lawyer who
believed his mission was to present all the available
evidence concerning the subject without slanting the
presentation to a particular point of view. I'm happy to
see Stackpole Books reissue this gem as part of its Custer
Library, This book collects, in one volume, some of the
most important and interesting contemporary accounts of the
Battle of the Little Big Horn, some of which are next to
impossible to find anywhere else. Graham includes excerpts
from Sioux, Cheyenne, Arikara and Crow Indian accounts of
the battle, statements of participants in the battle,
excerpts from the letters of Captain Fred Benteen to his
wife and to Theodore Goldin, and Lieutenant (later General)
Edward Godfrey's classic article on the battle. This is
one of the few books every person interested in Custer and
the Little Big Horn Battle must have close at hand.
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Vast Collection of Testimonies amd Letters on Custer & LBH,
By
This review is from: Custer Myth (The Custer Library) (Hardcover)
This is Graham's great collction of testimonies about Custer and the Little Big Horn from the Sioux, Cheyene, Rees, Crows, scouts, officers, soildiers and others. An incredible collection of material laid out in categorical chapters. Graham lays this often quoted collection out without prejudice and although he questions the Indian participant's accounts due to their lack of perception of exact time and spatial realities, he presents it all the same. What is quite fascinating are the virtual raw letters of Benteen to William Goldin. The letters show Benteen's bitter side particularly toward Custer and demonstrates that Reno was also not held highly on his list, if anyone was. Also, has Godfrey's great history of the battle and the book even includes challenging letters from Grahams critics to his personal responses. A great book for those that want to know all from multiple perspectives of the participants.
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A brilliant resource.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Custer Myth (Paperback)
This book gives no definitive answers on the biggest puzzles of Little Big Horn ... which is its greatest strength. By pulling together all the available testimony, from both sides and all angles, it's proof of how 'the fog of war' -- as well as participants' own agendas -- makes any battle more confusing to its participants than to those who come after. For the reader, piecing together the conflicting accounts, and assessing the characters/viewpoints/axes-to-grind of those giving them, it's a total immersion not just in the facts but in the feelings, prejudices and atmosphere of the time. A wonderful book. And one that should be basic training for every student of history, whatever their period. This is how history is.
12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
THE Primary Resource on the Little Big Horn,
By
This review is from: Custer Myth (Paperback)
It is my opinion that the three most famous battlefields on US soil are (in no particular order) the Little Big Horn, Gettysburg, and the Alamo. Each has a legion of students and enthusiasts accompanied by a number of printed resources. Stackpole Books has added to the printed resources on the Little Big Horn with its' collection of books known as The Custer Library. The most important of these books, in my opinion, is "The Custer Myth" It contains just about all of the available first person accounts of the battle known to exist. Many of the accounts are rather short but all are interesting. For the "Last Stand" buffs, it is like waking up on Christmas morning to find that you got everything you wanted except actual newsreel footage. For the casual observer of the subject, this may be the downfall of the book. After all, the stories greatly overlap and repeat each other. In doing so, they add another dimension of personalizing the battle even more. No Custer enthusiast should be without this book and no private library of American History is complete without it either. Do yourself a favor and add it to your library as well.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
You'll keep it in your library of books forever,
This review is from: The Custer myth, a source book of Custeriana. (Hardcover)
I went through a period where I read everything I could find on Custer and that day. And though this book is at least 20 years old, it's still the best yet....that I know of. It helped me understand what happened more than anything I'd ever before heard or read concerning that day.
It's a great book when it comes to understanding what happened. A good book.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
masterpiece...,
By
This review is from: The Custer myth, a source book of Custeriana. (Hardcover)
Hands down one of the five best books on the Battle Little Big Horn ever written. The CUSTER MYTH has stood the test of time and remains one of the most important research books available.
6 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
An Army Officer's View,
This review is from: Custer Myth (Paperback)
It was great to find a book published well over 50 years ago, so I could see what "spin" the author had on the battle. Surprisingly, the author did not laud Custer--the title comes from the author's belief that Custer was more made up than real. The author, though retired military, made what appeared to be a fair attempt to reconstruct the attacks from the Indian's point of view. The book does not compare to "Lakota Noon" in analysis, but the author states at the beginning he is just presenting the facts as reported by others. The book also contained other interesting information from Sitting Bull that even my boss, a Lakota, had not seen. Be warned, though: It's a long book with a lot of self-serving statements by Army officers.
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Custer Myth (The Custer Library) by W. A. Graham (Hardcover - February 1, 1995)
Used & New from: $8.99
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