A Rebel's Recollections


Gelesen von Lee Smalley

(4.7 stars; 39 reviews)

George Cary Eggleston's Civil War memoir begins with a separate essay on the living conditions and political opinions of Virginia’s citizenry before secession. The body of the work contains vivid descriptions and accounts of the men and women of the South during the time of the Confederacy. Eggleston praises its war heroes, Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson, and Jeb Stuart, but is highly critical of Jefferson Davis and of his government’s inefficiencies, red-tape, and favoritism. The book concludes with the war's end and a tribute to the character of the newly freed slaves.
This informative and engaging work, much of which appeared in The Atlantic Monthly, enjoyed great popularity throughout the country. Originally published in 1874, it went through four editions by 1905.
( Lee Smalley) (5 hr 32 min)

Kapitel

Prefaces of 1874 and 1905 7:35 Gelesen von Lee Smalley
Part 1: The Old Regime in the Old Dominion 21:59 Gelesen von Lee Smalley
Part 2: The Old Regime in the Old Dominion 18:45 Gelesen von Lee Smalley
Part 3: The Old Regime in the Old Dominion 18:12 Gelesen von Lee Smalley
Ch. 1: The Mustering 28:56 Gelesen von Lee Smalley
Ch. 2: The Men Who Made the Army 28:16 Gelesen von Lee Smalley
Ch. 3: The Temper of the Women 20:21 Gelesen von Lee Smalley
Ch. 4: Of the Time When Money Was "Easy" 32:21 Gelesen von Lee Smalley
Ch. 5 The Chevalier of the Lost Cause 31:05 Gelesen von Lee Smalley
Ch. 6: Lee, Jackson, and Some Lesser Worthies 31:06 Gelesen von Lee Smalley
Ch. 7: Some Queer People 24:01 Gelesen von Lee Smalley
Ch. 8: Red Tape 37:05 Gelesen von Lee Smalley
Ch. 9: The End, and After 32:42 Gelesen von Lee Smalley

Bewertungen


(5 stars)

Super interesting. The author has done an excellent job of explaining the minds of confederate soldiers. If you are debating listening to this you can jump to one of the most interesting chapters “Red Tape” which exposed how much damage the bureaucracy affected the confederate cause

Great memoir. The reader is fantastic!


(5 stars)