From Publishers Weekly
In 1864 the charming Elizabeth "Libbie" Bacon (1842-1933) married the flamboyant George Armstrong Custer, a 23-year-old Civil War brigadier general. Adapting enthusiastically to military life, she traveled with her husband to frontier posts and actively promoted his career as he achieved fame driving the Sioux and the Cheyenne Indian tribes onto reservations. In this insightful and extensively researched biography, Leckie ( Unlikely Warriors ) provides a look into the Custers' political and cultural worlds and documents their conflicts as well as their strong erotic bonds. After her husband's death at the battle of Little Bighorn in 1876, Libbie supported herself by lecturing and writing about her life with him. She devoted her energies to idealizing Custer as a hero, attacking critics who asserted that he had disobeyed orders and led his men into certain death at Bighorn. Illustrations. History Book Club selection.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
From School Library Journal
YA-An engrossing presentation of the life of George Armstrong Custer's wife and a valuable look at America's 19th century from an "average" woman's perspective. Elizabeth (Libby) Custer spent 57 years after the Battle of Little Bighorn glorifying the memory of her husband. This obsession led to many arenas, both political and social. Through friends such as Andrew and Louise Carnegie, Buffalo Bill, and William Sherman, she met many notables hoping they would exonerate her husband's name from any wrongdoing. Her own writings-Boots and Saddles and Following the Guidon lauded praises on him and made her a well-known writer of her day. Her influence and persona held back the critical analysis of her husband's military role until after her death. The few witnesses who chose to remain silent rather than upset Mrs. Custer did not outlive her. Therefore, many primary sources of the battle never reported the true conditions of the day. YAs might be turned off by the length and scholarly nature of the writing, but the table of contents allows students to peruse chapters that would be useful for research.
Linda Vretos, West Springfield High School, Springfield, VACopyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
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