From Publishers Weekly
The Battle of Fredericksburg, Va., in 1862 was the Union's most costly and humiliating defeat of the Civil War. In this powerful account of the conflict, Mitchell (Shadow on the Valley) chronicles the fates of the Irish soldiers who fought for both sides. Approaching his subject as Michael Shaara did in his 1974 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of Gettysburg, The Killer Angels, Mitchell starkly showcases real-life generals, captains, sergeants and privates as they fight and struggle to survive. On the frozen slopes of Marye's Heights, Union General Thomas Meagher commands the tough Irish Brigade. Ailing from wounds and troubled by Union delays and blunders, he gallantly leads his Yankee Irishmen as they vainly charge across open ground to reach Rebel entrenchments. Hidden within a sunken road and behind a stone wall, meanwhile, the Confederate Irishmen of Colonel Robert McMillan's 24th Georgia Volunteers nervously wait for the massive Yankee assault. Sgt. Michael Sullivan, McMillan's orderly, is steadfast and true, while across the line, William Tyrrell, a Yankee color sergeant, struggles with fear and self-doubt, hoping for a wound that will prevent him from running away. Through this compelling tale of valor, hardship and sacrifice, Mitchell demonstrates that the Civil War Irish fought like demons, but that their courage was no match for the flaming walls of cannon and musket fire that consumed them utterly.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Library Journal
On December 13, 1862, the Confederate and Union armies clashed in Fredericksburg, Virginia, in a savage battle. Mitchell shows the progression of "Bloody Sunday" through the eyes of six Irish soldiers, three on each side. Mitchell switches viewpoints frequently. Subheads offer time and place of segments, which shorten as the pace of battle heats up and grow longer as it wanes. The result is choppy and confusing, leaving the reader to wonder where he is and to root for both sides at once. Still, readers of war stories may enjoy the battle scenes, which are realistic and full of blood and body parts. Mitchell's previous book, Shadow on the Valley (LJ 1/94), also a Civil War novel, was praised for its excellent historical detail, which Fredricksburg also exhibits. Buy for Civil War buffs.
Andrea Lee Shuey, Dallas P.L.Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.