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Soldiering: The Civil War Diary of Rice C. Bull
by K. Bauer
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Presidio Press (1996-01-25)
ISBN: 0891412638
EAN: 9780891412632
Dewy Decimal #: 973.7447
Paperback: 259 pages
Release Date: 1995-06-01
SKU: 07110453
Condition: Good As issued no ja
Comments: Trade Paperback. Good condition with a few marks and notes in margins of text. Reading creases in spine and small dent in upper front corner of first half of text. Minor wear to cover. Tight binding and clean crisp text. Very Nice copy.
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Editorial Reviews
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Product Description
"An excellent firsthand account of the Civil War from a soldier's point of view. It is a masterful description of war's grim reality."--VFW Magazine
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Customer Reviews
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Soldiering
Rating (5)
Date: 2007-03-04
This books provides us with the knowledge of day to day survival in the union army. He, Rice C. Bull, was severely wounded and captured by the Confederate Army. He describes the conditions surrounding him while he lay unable to move. It's not a pretty picture and many died that could have been saved. He seems to have been a gentleman of high moral standing. There didn't seem to be any bitterness or hate in him. He was simply doing what he felt to be his duty to the best of his ability.
It's in reading these diaries that contain little parts of the war that we can piece together a more accurate complete picture. Read it and find out what was thought of the food and how marching became a way of like.
The privates tale gives a valuable insight to life during the Civil War.
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A great adventure written by a first rate story teller.
Rating (5)
Date: 2001-05-22
3 out of 5 customers found this reveiw helpful
For those readers who are interested in a good first account of life as a Yankee soldier during the American Civil War, this is the book. I found the account written by Elijah Hunt Rhodes to be quite bland. Full of patriotic sentiment that sheds little light on his vulnerability. Rhodes' may have been a great soldier but he is an amateur storyteller. Rice Bull on the other hand, is a natural born writer. I found this book hard to put down. The pictures Bull paints are startling, amazing, hilarious and terrifying. This book's depiction of war lives in an entirely different universe than, John Wayne, Turner Classics, or any of the tedious accounts written by the Civil War Generals attempting to clear their name. Full of fantastic insight and ironies this book is right up there with "Catch 22" and "Journey to the End of the Night".
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Soldiering : The Civil War Diary of Rice C. Bull
Rating (5)
Date: 2001-02-03
1 out of 1 customers found this reveiw helpful
This is an excellent book to get an understanding in the daily life of a Northern soldier. The R.C. Bull's journal is an "easy" read and allows the reader to grasp what it was like to be in the infantry during the Civil War. R.C. Bull writes about the types of rations they were issued, their living conditions, and the marches they had to endure. He writes about trading goods with the Confederate "rebs" and his treatment as wounded prisoner. I would highly recommend this book to anyone interested in the life of an enlist man during the Civil War.
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Very Good Account of the Civil War
Rating (4)
Date: 1998-11-13
2 out of 2 customers found this reveiw helpful
After reading three diaries (Diary of Daniel Chisholm, Three Years in Co. K, and this book) I place this one at the top (for now.) The description of Bull's experience following Chancellorsville, wounded in the hip and face, lying in the mud, while men are dying all around him, is particularly moving. I'm a novice Civil War buff, and would recommend this title to someone who has more than a passing interest in the daily life of a Northern soldier.
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