The look, sound, and smells of the Civil War are brought to life by writer-illustrator--and Union Army enlistee--David Hunter Strother. His proximity to Union leaders, having risen to the rank of brigadier general, and his reporter's eye for both the glorious and the mundane make his diaries a vivid evocation of the war. Strother happened to be positioned next to General George McClellan, the Union commander at the battle of Antietam, and one evening he offers an enlightening description of McClellan's battlefield demeanor. The next morning, however, he saw fit to describe the horror of hundreds of corpses decomposing in a cornfield. Strother skillfully draws the reader alongside him, as when he stands beneath the portico of the White House to listen to Lincoln deliver an impromptu address from an upper-story window. His observations are commonly cited in other books on the Civil War, but his narrative taken as a whole carries the reader into the heart of the conflict in a way that discrete quotes cannot. --Robert McNamara
Review
Skillfully edited and annotated, Strother's diary offers a rare glimpse into many critical actions.
The Civil War in Books
An incomparable addition to any Civil War collection.
New York Times Book Review
This book is a real find, to be recommended to Civil War 'buffs' of all levels.
Times Literary Supplement
A Virginia Yankee in the Civil War is definitely one of the best personal narratives of the war.
Civil War History
Strother possessed many attributes that qualify him as one of the best reporters of the Civil War.
James I. Robertson Jr., Virginia Magazine
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