Longstreet: The Confederate General Who Defied the South

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Longstreet: The Confederate General Who Defied the South is a non-fiction book by Elizabeth R. Varon, published in 2023 by Simon & Schuster. It is about James Longstreet.

Branda Wineapple, in a book review in The New York Times, wrote that the work "is not so much about Longstreet’s character or his motivations [...] but about a symbolic Longstreet" related to the disputes about history after the American Civil War, especially how different people perceived him differently.[1]

The book has more content about Longstreet's activities after the Civil War, in the Reconstruction Era, compared to his activities during the war.[2] Varon also argued that people in the Southern United States chose to suppress the memory of Longstreet because of his postbellum pro-civil rights activism.[3]

Varon consulted writings by historians and their evaluations of Longstreet's ability in the war in order to develop her summative view.[4]

Content

The book chronicles how Longstreet's family made amends with the family of Ulysses S. Grant.[2]

Reception

References

Further reading

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