Skip to product information
1 of 1

Sherman's Ghosts

Publisher:

Regular price $26.95
Regular price $26.95 Sale price $26.95
Sold out
This “thought-provoking” military history considers the influence of General Sherman’s Civil War tactics on American conflicts through the twentieth century (The New York Times).   “To know what wa...
Read More
  • 03 March 2015
View Product Details
This “thought-provoking” military history considers the influence of General Sherman’s Civil War tactics on American conflicts through the twentieth century (The New York Times).
 
“To know what war is, one should follow our tracks,” Gen. William T. Sherman once wrote to his wife, describing the devastation left by his armies in Georgia. Sherman’s Ghosts is an investigation of those tracks, as well as those left across the globe by the American military in the 150 years since Sherman’s infamous “March to the Sea.”
 
Sherman’s Ghosts opens with an epic retelling of General Sherman’s fateful decision to terrorize the South’s civilian population in order to break the back of the Confederacy. Acclaimed journalist and historian Matthew Carr exposes how this strategy, which Sherman called “indirect warfare,” became the central preoccupation of war planners in the twentieth century and beyond. He offers a lucid assessment of the impact Sherman’s slash-and-burn policies have had on subsequent wars and military conflicts, including World War II and in the Philippines, Korea, Vietnam, and even Iraq and Afghanistan.
 
In riveting accounts of military campaigns and in the words of American soldiers and strategists, Carr finds ample evidence of Sherman’s long shadow. Sherman’s Ghosts is a rare reframing of how we understand our violent history and a call to action for those who hope to change it.
files/i.png Icon
Price: $26.95
Pages: 352
Publisher: The New Press
Imprint: The New Press
Publication Date: 03 March 2015
Trim Size: 8.25 X 5.50 in
ISBN: 9781595589552
Format: Hardcover
REVIEWS Icon
Praise for Blood and Faith:
"A splendid work of synthesis."
The New York Times Book Review

"A fascinating account of perhaps the first major episode of European ethnic cleansing and, just as importantly, the story of the beginning of the conviction that 'blood' matters more than belief; a conviction that led, in the end, to modern racism."
—Kwame Anthony Appiah

"Balanced and thoroughly researched history."
Literary Review