General Robert E. Lee was a complicated man and military figure. From his birth as the son of a celebrated and tragic Revolutionary War hero, to his career after the Civil War when he led by example to heal the terrible wounds of the conflict, there is much to learn from this celebrated general. In just three years of service, he directed the Confederacy's most renowned fighting force, the famed Army of Northern Virginia, through a series of battles, including Second Manassas, Antietam, and Gettysburg, which have since come to define combat in the Civil War.
Here, for the first time, Noah Andre Trudeau follows the general's Civil War path with a special emphasis on Lee's changing set of personal values as the conflict wended through four bloody years and explores his famous skills as a crafty and daring tactician. An insightful new account,Robert E. Leedelivers a fresh perspective that leads to a greater understanding of one of the most studied and yet enigmatic military figures in American history.
Introduction: Beginnings, Endings
A First Family of Virginia
West Point
Engineer and Father
Mexico
Toward the Abyss
Sidelined
The Seven Days
Raiding North (1)
Holding the Line
Raiding North (2)
Gettysburg
To the End
Finale
The unique leadership and lasting legacy of Robert E. Lee, the most beloved and studied military leader of his timeRejoice in a study of Lee that rigorously eschews both hagiography and psychobiography, and that definitely belongs in even the most modest Civil War collection. Roland Green
For a century after the death of Robert E. Lee in 1870, his image achieved iconic status in the South--and beyond. In recent decades, however, historians have discovered a flesh and blood Lee who is far more complex and interesting than the marble man of yore. Trudeau's fast-paced biography offers a well-rounded portrait of the real Robert E. Lee. James M. McPherson, besl3*