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MARC Record from marc_overdrive

Record ID marc_overdrive/InternetArchiveCrMarc-2010-06-11b.mrc:5189314:2909
Source marc_overdrive
Download Link /show-records/marc_overdrive/InternetArchiveCrMarc-2010-06-11b.mrc:5189314:2909?format=raw

LEADER: 02909nam 2200265Ka 4500
008 000000s2009 nyu s 000 0 eng d
040 $aTEFOD$cTEFOD
006 m d
007 cr cn---------
020 $a9780307271495 (electronic bk. : Adobe Digital Editions)
037 $bOverDrive, Inc.$nhttp://www.overdrive.com
100 1 $aGroom, Winston $q(Winston Groom).
245 10 $aVicksburg, 1863$h[electronic resource].
260 $aNew York :$bKnopf Doubleday Publishing Group,$c2009.
500 $aTitle from eBook information screen.
520 $aA riveting history of the battle that permanently turned the tide of the Civil War.While Gettysburg is better known, Winston Groom makes clear in this engrossing narrative that Vicksburg was the more important battle from a strategic point of view. Re-creating the epic campaign that culminated at Vicksburg, Groom details the arduous struggle by the Union to gain control of the Mississippi River valley and to divide the Confederacy in two. He takes us back to 1861, when Lincoln chooses Ulysses S. Grant--seen at the time as a mediocre general with a drinking problem--to lead the Union army south from Illinois.We follow Grant and his troops as they fight one campaign after another, including the famous engagements at Forts Henry and Donelson and the bloodbath at Shiloh, until, after almost a year, they close in on Vicksburg. We witness Grant's seven long months of battle against the determined Confederate army, and the many failed Union attempts to take Vicksburg, during which thousands of soldiers on both sides would be buried and, ultimately, the fate of the Confederacy would be sealed. As Groom recounts this landmark confrontation, he brings the participants to life. We see Grant in all his grim determination, the feistiness of William Tecumseh Sherman, and the pride and intransigence of Confederate leaders from Jefferson Davis and General Joseph E. Johnston to General John C. Pemberton, the Philadelphia-born Rebel who commanded at Vicksburg and took the blame for losing.A first-rate work of military history and an essential contribution to our understanding of the Civil War.From the Hardcover edition.
533 $aElectronic reproduction.$bNew York :$cKnopf Doubleday Publishing Group,$d2009.$nRequires Adobe Digital Editions (file size: 2902 KB).
538 $aRequires Adobe Digital Editions (file size: 2902 KB).
653 #0 $aHistory
653 #0 $aNonfiction
655 7 $aElectronic books.$2local
776 1 $cOriginal$z0307264254
856 4 $uhttp://search.overdrive.com/SearchResults.aspx?ReserveID={56652B84-2F71-452C-92D3-1545CC2DE820}$zClick for library availability
856 4 $uhttp://www.librarybin.com/ContentDetails.htm?ID=56652B84-2F71-452C-92D3-1545CC2DE820$zClick to purchase
856 4 $3Image$uhttp://images.contentreserve.com/ImageType-100/0111-1/{56652B84-2F71-452C-92D3-1545CC2DE820}Img100.jpg