I have read several of the Shaara books, but I was waiting to read my copy of "The Smoke at Dawn" before going to that part of Tennessee again.
So, I finally read the 500 page volume. Its funny, because the Shaara books are huge, but they have such a great flow to them. They read like a much shorter book because it is so easy to get into them.
Another thing about the Shaara books....This isn't a dry telling of the battle, that most of us have a hard time following. Jeff Shaara (and his dad before him) really try to get into the heads of the characters. I feel like they try hard to understand, and write about the logic inside of the minds of the legendary generals.
I think the author really paints a clear picture of how the main generals (Bragg, CSA, and Rosecrans, US) came to both fail at this battle. George Thomas, Rosecrans replacement, really sticks out as a fascinating, and often overlooked (by history) character
I feel like I KNOW some of these guys better myself now too. I would absolutely expect Braxton Bragg to not get a basic joke told by a common Johnny Reb. I would also expect Jefferson Davis to defend Bragg to his mutinous army.
Sure, this is historic fiction, but I feel like I understand so much more about the players involved after reading one of Shaara's books.
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