Review: Lankford, Cry Havoc! (2007)
Dec. 27th, 2023 01:28 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)

My rating: 5 of 5 stars
This book is about the first half of 1861. Lankford is interested in how the Civil War came to happen, and particularly interested in dismantling the idea that it was inevitable, or that it had to happen the way it did. It DIDN'T have to happen the way it did, and he digs into the decisions made by individuals (Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis, of course, but also the mayor of Baltimore, the commander of the Gosport Navy Yard, William Seward and Gideon Welles, random telegraphers, captains of regiments of volunteers...) to think about other choices they could have made. As with the other book of Lankford's I've read, Richmond Burning: The Last Days of the Confederate Capital, he draws on a wide variety of sources and considers everything carefully and critically. And he does a good job of conveying how far from consensus reality the North and South had drifted (his prologue is Harper's Ferry 1859 and the widely differing interpretations of John Brown) and how different a single event, like Lincoln's call for volunteers after Fort Sumter, could look depending on where you were standing.
Four and a half stars, round up to five.
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