These essays use the soldiers' personal accounts to examine their beliefs and practices, creating a most readable treatment of this horrendous conflict.
~Booklist
"The overall effect of this collection is refreshing and two-fold: First, soldiers are given their due agency; they shape, and are in turn shaped by, the realities of the war they made. Second, soldiers are firmly connected to their wider context. As an extension of their homefront societies, Civil War soldiers were political, spiritual and individual beings, struggling with all their might to remain connected to former selves and former lives, even as they remade America. Taken together, these essays make a convincing case that the war was what the common soldiers made it. They led, and the nation followed."
~Stephen Berry, author of All That Makes a Man: Love and Ambition in the Civil W
"Taken together, the essays are particular interesting and informative in revealing the various ways in which the participants remembered this bloody conflict, revealing soldiers and civilians through their experiences as political, spiritual, and individual beeings
~Choice
"The View from the Ground, a collection of essays edited by Aaron Sheehan-Dean, enhances our understanding of these nineteenth-century combatants. Collectively, these essays reinforce the importance of studying military history beyond technology, battles, and leadership."
~Ohio Valley History
"These nicely crafted and thoroughly noted essays do indeed represent well the recent scholarship on the Civil War soldier and his world."
~The Journal of Southern History
"This collection of essays is a valuable contribution and a useful tool in the classroom as well."
~Virginia Magazine of History and Biography
"The View from the Ground offers readers a look at some of the most cutting-edge scholarship on Civil War soldiers, demonstrating how far the field has progressed."
~Lesley J. Gordon, University of Akron, Civil War History
"Readers will find much to ponder and learn from this fine collection."
~Lesley J. Gordon, University of Akron, Civil War History