John Bell Hood : the rise, fall, and resurrection of a Confederate general
(2013)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Savas Beatie, 2013
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781611211412 (electronic bk.) MWT12325658, 1611211417 (electronic bk.) 12325658
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

John Bell Hood was one of the Confederacy's most successful and enigmatic generals. He died at 48 after a brief illness in August of 1879, leaving behind the first draft of his memoirs Advance and Retreat: Personal Experiences in the United States and Confederate States Armies. Published posthumously the following year, the memoirs immediately became as controversial as their author. A careful and balanced examination of these controversies, however, coupled with the recent discovery of Hoods personal papers (which were long considered lost) finally sets the record straight in John Bell Hood: The Rise, Fall, and Resurrection of a Confederate General. Outlived by most of his critics, Hoods published version of many of the major events and controversies of his Confederate military career were met with scorn and skepticism. Some described his memoirs as nothing more than a polemic against his arch-rival Joseph E. Johnston. These unflattering opinions persisted throughout the decades and reached their nadir in 1992, when an influential author described Hoods memoirs as merely a bitter, misleading, and highly distorted treatise replete with distortions, misrepresentations, and outright falsifications. Without any personal papers to contradict them, many historians and writers portrayed Hood as an inept and dishonest opium addict and a conniving, vindictive cripple of a man. One writer went so far as to brand him a fool with a license to kill his own men. What most readers don't know is that nearly all of these authors' misused sources, ignored contrary evidence, and/or suppressed facts sympathetic to Hood. Stephen M. Sam Hood, a distant relative of the general, embarked on a meticulous forensic study of the common perceptions and controversies of his famous kinsman. His careful examination of the original sources utilized to create the broadly accepted facts about John Bell Hood uncovered startlingly poor scholarship by some of the most well-known and influential historians of the 20th and 21st centuries. These discoveries, coupled with his access to a large cache of recently discovered Hood papers many penned by generals and other officers who served with Hood confirm Hood's account that originally appeared in his memoir and resolve, for the first time, some of the most controversial aspects of Hoods long career. Blindly accepting historical truths without vigorous challenge, cautions one historian, is a perilous path to understanding real history. The shocking revelations in John Bell Hood: The Rise, Fall, and Resurrection of a Confederate General will forever change our perceptions of Hood as both a man and a general, and those who set out to shape his legacy

Mode of access: World Wide Web

Additional Credits