
The soldiers of the Civil War had no need for newsreels to know why they were fighting. In Chandra Manning's remarkable new history, What This Cruel War Was Over, they tell us themselves:
"The fact that slavery is the sole undeniable cause of this infamous rebellion, that it is a war of, by, and for Slavery, is as plain as the noon-day sun."In What This Cruel War Was Over, Chandra Manning reveals the voices of the soldiers of the Union and the Confederacy. Her exhaustive research, using countless diaries, letters, and regimental newsletters, follows in the footsteps of James McPherson, recent recipient of the Pritzker Military Library Literature Award, in its commitment to uncovering the views of the citizen soldier in the Civil War - the causes that drove them to fight, the views that evolved as the "cruel war" engulfed them. Why did non slave-owners, who accounted for the vast majority of Southerners, take up arms to fight? How did Northerners, who had never thought of themselves as abolitionists and wanted nothing to do with "the negro", react to their first encounters with the violence of slavery?