THE UNIVERSITY OF IXTENNESSEE PRESS

Fall/ Winter 2018 Order online at utpress.org or call 800-621-2736

NEW BOOKS

American History...... 4

Appalachian Studies...... 8

Autobiography...... 8

Civil War...... 10, 11, 12, 13, 15, 20

Environmental Studies...... 2

Journalism...... 6, 12

Law...... 1

Literary Biography...... 4

Literary Criticism...... 16, 17

Military History...... 14

Nature...... 2

Nineteenth-Century History...... 6, 7, 14, 20

Reference...... 21

Regional Studies...... 4

Religion...... 20

Sports...... 1

Tennessee Studies...... 9, 20, 21

Twentieth-Century History...... 8, 9

Women’s Studies...... 1

New in Paper...... 18

Recent Releases...... 22–23

Order Form...... 24

THE UNIVERSITY OF Victoria Cape image courtesy of Victoria Hermes. Cover and catalog design by Jill Knight Design. TENNESSEE PRESS

600 Henley Street • Conference Center Building, Suite 110 • Knoxville, TN 37996-4108 To order call 800-621-2736 or shop online at www.utpress.org

What a nice description of the progression of women’s basketball in the 1970s! Bill Haltom and Amanda Swanson paint a very accurate picture of the environment in women’s athletics at “that time in this new book.” —from the Foreword

Full Court Press How Pat Summitt, a High School Basketball Player, and a Legal Team Changed the Game

BILL HALTOM AND AMANDA SWANSON WITH A FOREWORD BY JOAN CRONAN

When Victoria Cape moved to Oak Ridge, Tennessee, in the early 1970s, she had no idea that her desire to play basketball would change the game for women and the sport in Tennessee. Encouraged to sign up for basketball by her athletic father, Victoria was in for a shock: the Tennessee Secondary School Athletic Association endorsed an entirely different form of the game for high school women than the version of basketball commonly played around the Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-435-9 country. Women played six-on-six basketball, in which offensive players stayed on one half Kindle ISBN 978-1-62190-436-6 eISBN 978-1-62190-437-3 of the court, and defensive players on the other half—defenders could spend their entire $19.95t careers without taking a shot. Victoria Cape sued the TSSAA, and her lawsuit paved the way AVAILABLE NOVEMBER 2018 for women to play basketball by the same rules as men and served as an early test case of groundbreaking Title IX legislation. Further adding to the case’s history-making précis was Sports, Law, Women’s Studies the presence of a young Pat Summitt, recently elevated to head coach of the Tennessee Lady Volunteers, who bravely testified on behalf of Cape during the lawsuit. Full Court Press is a valuable addition to research on how individual initiative can bring about social change—in Tennessee, in the sporting world, and as a part of the broader struggle for women’s equality. Written in a lighthearted and inspiring style, this book is a must-read for anyone fascinated by the many achievements of Pat Summitt, Tennessee ALSO OF INTEREST women’s basketball, or women’s sports history in general.

BILL HALTOM is an attorney with the firm of Lewis Thomason in Memphis, Tennessee. A practicing attorney for four decades, he has served as the president of the Tennessee Bar Association and the Memphis Bar Association. He has been an award-winning newspaper columnist and has written six books, including The Other Fellow May Be Right, a biography of the late Tennessee Senator Howard Baker.

AMANDA SWANSON worked as women’s basketball operations assistant at Mount St. Joseph University and is currently a law student at the University of Virginia. The Final Season The Perseverance of Pat Summitt MARIA M. CORNELIUS FOREWORD BY CANDACE PARKER Cloth ISBN 978-1-62190-272-0 $29.95t Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-393-2 $19.95t

University of Tennessee Press Fall/Winter 2018–2019 1 Order online at utpress.org or call 800-621-2736

Wonderful Weeds and Various Varmints The Natural World in Our Backyards and Beyond

BOB COLLIER ILLUSTRATIONS BY GALE HINTON

Immersed in a world of sprawling concrete and hyper-advancing technology, we can begin to see the natural landscape as a thing of the past. All the more reason, suggests Bob Collier, a self-professed nature lover, to set out on the often-unrecognized bridge that still connects human beings with their natural surroundings. In Wonderful Weeds Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-449-6 and Various Varmints, readers can walk through a myriad of stories as if on a leisurely eISBN 978-1-62190-450-2 stroll through the seasons. Each chapter in this collection revives articles from Collier’s $26t beloved, syndicated “Nature Notes” column written for East Tennessee’s Shopper News. AVAILABLE OCTOBER 2018 From birding with his spouse to sharing family lore from

Nature, Environmental Studies childhood, Collier by turns informs and enchants as we learn his way of looking at the world. In the section on spring, he reflects on his time gardening with his grandmother, birding in the mountains, and looks at the gifts the season brings as an opportunity to meet and appreciate them. Summer launches a warmer section of stories as Collier discusses ALSO OF INTEREST the sounds of summer, firefly watching, and the fascinating insects all around. The colors of autumn are described with admiration and wonder as Collier also relates stories about a sneaky groundhog, creatures of the night, and the marvels of pumpkin season. The book concludes with the winter season as Collier describes chilly outdoor adventures and a rejuvenating crystalline view of the world.

BOB COLLIER was a general surgeon practicing at St. Mary’s Hospital (now CHS Tennova) in Knoxville, Tennessee, for some 40 years until his retirement. His column, which originally began as a bird-watching column and later expanded to cover other aspects of natural history, has always had a focus on sharing the wonders of the outdoors with his readers and encouraging them to get out the Ephemeral by Nature door. Exploring the Exceptional with a Tennessee Naturalist STEPHEN LYN BALES Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-354-3 $24.95t

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Bob Collier’s enthusiasm and intrigue with the world around him are readily evident. There’s a healthy blend of ‘in-my-own- backyard’ material along with descriptive travelogues to distant locations. Each piece delivers and urges would-be readers to get off the couch and see what they’re missing.” —Sam Venable

University of Tennessee Press Fall/Winter 2018–2019 3 Order online at utpress.org or call 800-621-2736

Rufus James Agee in Tennessee

PAUL F. BROWN

One of the most gifted of America’s writers, James Rufus Agee (1909–1955), spent a third of his short life in Tennessee, yet no biographical treatment until this one has so fully explored his roots in the state and their enormous impact on his artistic sensibility. In Rufus, Paul F. Brown draws deeply on a rich trove of journals, letters, interviews, and contemporaneous newspaper accounts, many never before analyzed, to produce a capti- Hardcover ISBN 978-1-62190-424-3 vating portrait of Agee’s boyhood. eISBN 978-1-62190-425-0 $34.95s Brown meticulously delineates Agee’s family history, his earliest years as a sensitive child growing up in Knoxville’s Fort Sanders neighborhood, and the traumatic event that AVAILABLE NOVEMBER 2018 marked his sixth year: his father’s death in an automo- Literary Biography, American bile accident. Young Rufus—as his family always called History, Regional Studies him—revered his father and would use his memories of the tragedy to create his most enduring work of fiction, the Pulitzer Prize–winning A Death in the Family. Just a few years after his father was killed, Agee’s mother placed him in the St. Andrew’s School for Mountain Boys near Sewanee, Tennessee, where he would meet ALSO OF INTEREST his mentor and lifelong friend, Father James Flye; these experiences would inspire Agee’s poignant novella, The Morning Watch. Another year in Knoxville followed, and then his mother, newly remarried, whisked him away to New England, where he would complete his education at Phillips Exeter Academy and Harvard. Yet Tennessee would remain forever in his blood. Brown’s account deftly reconstructs various settings the young Agee encountered— including not only turn-of-the-century Knoxville and St. Andrew’s but also the mountain hamlet of LaFollette, his father’s hometown—and the complex family relationships that swirled around the young writer-to-be. Brown also explores Knoxville’s belated discovery of its famous son, initiated when Hollywood came to town in 1962 to film All the Way Home, an adaptation of A Death in the Family, whose production history is recounted The Making of James Agee HUGH DAVIS in an appendix. Notable commemorations—including academic seminars, a public park, Cloth ISBN 978-1-62190-607-0 and a street named in Agee’s honor—would come later as the writer’s posthumous repu- $39.95s tation bloomed. And now, with Rufus, we have the definitive account of how it all began.

PAUL F. BROWN teaches music at Coalfield School in Morgan County, Tennessee. As an independent researcher, he has published articles and lectured on James Agee at various forums and is a consultant for a forthcoming Agee documentary.

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If we want to know James Agee, we first must see Rufus in situ. Paul Brown has rediscovered the boy Agee in his native Knoxville and East Tennessee before he imagined himself as the literary Rufus of A Death in the Family and Richard of The Morning Watch. Brown’s Rufus enlarges our understanding of Agee as a novelist, journalist, poet, critic, and screenwriter by calling forth the mythic writer sought by countless pilgrims inspired by such works as Knoxville: Summer of 1915 and Let Us Now Praise Famous Men.”

—Paul Ashdown

University of Tennessee Press Fall/Winter 2018–2019 5 Order online at utpress.org or call 800-621-2736

The Library of Congress

Andrew Jackson A Rhetorical Portrayal of Presidential Leadership

AMOS KIEWE

Andrew Jackson’s presidency and legacy have been the subject of much study. His career and life, particularly his actions as America’s seventh president, still reverberate in our culture today. Yet Amos Kiewe mounts a groundbreaking intervention into Jackson studies by focusing his critical lens on a little-studied aspect of the populist leader’s 1830– 31 campaign and subsequent presidency: his creative use of the press. Jackson was a force Hardcover ISBN 978-1-62190-447-2 for reinvention, cannily directing his speeches—like no previous candidate—to the public eISBN 978-1-62190-448-9 $39.95s at large and garnering unprecedented newspaper coverage throughout his campaign and time in office. By focusing on public addresses, Kiewe is able to trace Jackson’s rhetorical AVAILABLE DECEMBER 2018 political maneuvering through his early campaign and the major trials of his presidency. Nineteenth-Century History With nuance and deep examination of Jackson’s rhetoric, Kiewe dispels the myth Journalism that Jackson was not an articulate writer, thereby clarifying historical perceptions of his presidency and relationship to the public at large. Tracing Jackson’s initial plans for the presidency through his campaign and early time in office, Kiewe sheds light on Jackson’s ambitions, viewpoints, and strategies and deepens the scholarship on the Tennessee soldier and statesman. Andrew Jackson: A Rhetorical Portrayal of Presidential Leadership offers ALSO OF INTEREST significant insight into one of America’s most famous—and infamous—presidents, and adds new and critical information to the study of rhetoric and politics in the United States.

AMOS KIEWE is a professor and chair of the Department of Communication and Rhetorical Studies at Syracuse University. He is the author or editor of seven books including most recently Confronting Anti-Semitism: Seeking an End to Hateful Rhetoric and FDR’s First Fireside Chat: Public Confidence and the Banking Crisis.

The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume 9, 1831 EDITED BY DANIEL FELLER, THOMAS COENS, AND LAURA-EVE MOSS Cloth ISBN 978-1-62190-004-7 $92s

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The Library of Congress

Andrew Jackson and the Rise of the Democratic Party

MARK R. CHEATHEM

In Andrew Jackson and the Rise of the Democratic Party, author Mark R. Cheathem provides a unique historical analysis and bold critique of American partisanship from the early republic to the end of Andrew Jackson’s administration. Cheathem begins by discussing the American political system after the American Revolutionary War while the debates over the ratification of the Constitution stormed Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-453-3 on. In doing so, he delivers a contextual and chronological analysis of how the political $24.95s system evolved from the vision of the Founding Fathers to Jackson’s populist Democratic party. Though other political changes throughout the decades affected the development of AVAILABLE AUGUST 2018 Jacksonian Democracy, Cheathem argues it was an identity crisis in the Republican party Nineteenth-Century History during Jackson’s rise to power that allowed Jackson’s populism to thrive. The faltering of the Republican party and Jackson’s executive agenda continued to shape the state of the Democratic party for years. Additionally, Cheathem considers both Jacksonian Democracy’s impact on the political system of the time and his lingering populist influence in the altered Republican party and contemporary Republican presidencies. Cheathem deftly portrays the political nuances of Jackson’s rise, detailing events that shaped the early form and long-term durability of the ALSO OF INTEREST Democratic party. Finally, Cheathem notes that the Democratic party of the Jacksonian era and Jackson’s ideology are hardly embraced by today’s Democratic party nor seen as the epitome of democracy. Setting all such historicism aside, Cheathem points American readers to the democratic climate of the present, welcoming renewed scrutiny of the one system which is ours to improve.

MARK R. CHEATHEM is a professor of history at Cumberland University in Lebanon, Tennessee. He is the author of Andrew Jackson, Southerner and Old Hickory’s Nephew: The Political and Private Struggles of Andrew Jackson Donelson. He is the editor of Jacksonian and Antebellum Age: People and Perspectives.

The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume 10, 1832 EDITED BY DANIEL FELLER, THOMAS COENS, AND LAURA-EVE MOSS Cloth ISBN 978-1-62190-267-6 $92s

University of Tennessee Press Fall/Winter 2018–2019 7 Order online at utpress.org or call 800-621-2736

Courtesy of the Himler family

The Making of An American The Autobiography of a Hungarian Immigrant, Appalachian Entrepreneur, and OSS Officer

MARTIN HIMLER EDITED BY CATHY CASSADY CORBIN, WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY DOUG CANTRELL, AND A FOREWORD BY CHARLES FENYVESI

Martin Himler emigrated from Hungary to America in 1907, and he arrived in New York City with no money and no plan other than to find work. From these impoverished

Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-451-9 beginnings, Himler persevered to become a self-made new American. As a coal mining eISBN 978-1-62190-452-6 entrepreneur, he established the Himler Coal Company—a bold experiment in a worker- $34.95s owned mine—founded the small town of Himlerville, Kentucky—a town almost completely AVAILABLE OCTOBER 2018 populated by Hungarian immigrants—and founded and edited a weekly newspaper, the

Autobiography, Appalachian Magyar Bányászlap (Hungarian Miners’ Journal). During WWII, Himler was called by Studies, Twentieth-Century History the United States government to work for the Office of Strategic Services (OSS). Colonel Himler arrested more than 300 Nazi war criminals and interrogated 40 himself. Himler’s autobiography tells in Himler’s own words his life story as it evolves into the American dream, wherein hard work results in success. Himler captivates readers from his earliest memories of his childhood in Hungary to his experiences with the OSS. Following Himler’s death, the manuscript of the autobiography was passed down ALSO OF INTEREST among Himler family members and then donated to the Martin County Historical and Genealogical Society, Inez, Kentucky, in 2007. Editor Cathy Cassady Corbin’s annotations enhance Himler’s words, while the introduction by scholar Doug Cantrell provides historical context for Himler’s migration to Appalachia. Finally, Charles Fenyvesi’s foreword analyzes Himler’s courageous OSS work.

CATHY CASSADY CORBIN is a retired English teacher, current editor, and co- coordinator of the Himler Project.

DOUG CANTRELL is a professor in the History Department at Elizabethtown Community and Technical College in Elizabethtown, Kentucky.

Life Beyond the Holocaust CHARLES FENYVESI has been a journalist since 1962 and has written for such Memories and Realities newspapers as the Washington Post and US News and World Report. His most MIRA RYCZKE KIMMELMAN recent book is When the World Was Whole: Three Centuries of Memories. Paper ISBN 978-1-57233-436-6 $26.95t

Appalachian Echoes Richard S. Starnes, Nonfiction Editor

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Overton Park A People’s History

BROOKS LAMB

At the heart of Memphis lies Overton Park, a 342-acre public space that contains the world- class Memphis Zoo, an old-growth forest, the Memphis College of Art, an amphitheater, and the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, among other beloved amenities. Founded in 1901, the park has been at the center of both celebration and controversy. Performers like Elvis Presley and Johnny Cash have dazzled audiences there, while local children have long enjoyed its playgrounds and runners its jogging trails. During the civil rights era, Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-460-1 eISBN 978-1-62190-461-8 desegregating the park became a major goal of local activists, and the park’s Greensward Kindle ISBN 978-1-62190-462-5 was the scene of protests against the . Late in the 1960s and throughout the $24.95t

1970s, when the proposed route of Interstate 40 threatened the park, concerned citizens AVAILABLE NOVEMBER 2018 banded together to fight the plan—a struggle that reached the Supreme Court and eventually Tennessee Studies, saved the park for future generations. Twentieth-Century History This delightfully informative book, filled with historic photos, offers a history of the park from the perspective of those who lived it. Brooks Lamb interviewed nearly a score of Memphians—from civil rights activist Johnnie Turner to U.S. Congressman Steve Cohen, from artist Martha Kelly to retired zookeepers Kathy Fay and Richard Meek—to learn what the park has meant to them and to discover the transformations they have witnessed. The ALSO OF INTEREST stories they tell reveal a dynamic place that remains, despite changes and challenges, a people’s park and, in the words of one resident, “the heartbeat of Memphis.”

BROOKS LAMB is currently the conservation projects manager for rural lands at The Land Trust for Tennessee. A graduate of Rhodes College in Memphis and a 2016 Truman Scholar, he wrote Overton Park with the assistance of the Bonner Scholarship and a fellowship from the Rhodes Institute for Regional Studies.

From Boss Crump to King Willie How Race Changed Memphis Politics OTIS SANFORD Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-417-5 $24.95t

University of Tennessee Press Fall/Winter 2018–2019 9 Order online at utpress.org or call 800-621-2736

Decisions at Chattanooga The Nineteen Critical Decisions That Defined the Battle

LAWRENCE K. PETERSON MAPS BY TIM KISSEL

Following the defeat of Maj. Gen. William S. Rosecrans’s of the Cumberland at the Battle of Chickamauga, Gen. Braxton Bragg and the Army of Tennessee retreated to Chattanooga and surrounded Rosecrans and his men by occupying Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge. The Battle of Chattanooga would prove the final defeat of the Confederacy in East Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-421-2 Tennessee and open the door for Sherman’s Atlanta Campaign. Kindle ISBN 978-1-62190-422-9 Decisions at Chattanooga introduces readers to critical decisions made by Confederate eISBN 978-1-62190-423-6 $29.95t and Union commanders. Larry Peterson examines the decisions that shaped the way both campaign and battle unfolded. Rather than offering a history of the Battle of Chattanooga, AVAILABLE SEPTEMBER 2018 Peterson focuses on the critical decisions, presenting the reader with a coherent and Civil War manageable blueprint of the battle’s development. Exploring and studying the critical decisions allows the reader to progress from an understanding of what happened to why events happened as they did. Complete with maps and a guided tour, Decisions at Chattanooga is an indispensable primer, and readers looking for a digestible introduction to the Battle of Chattanooga can tour this sacred ground—or read about it at their leisure—with key insights into the campaign and ALSO OF INTEREST a deeper understanding of the Civil War itself. Decisions at Chattanooga is the fourth in a series of books that will explore the critical decisions of major campaigns and battles of the Civil War.

LAWRENCE K. PETERSON retired from United Airlines as a Boeing 757/767 Standards Captain. He is the author of Confederate Combat Commander: The Remarkable Life of Brigadier General Alfred Jefferson Vaughan Jr.and the forthcoming Decisions of the Atlanta Campaign.

Confederate Combat Commander The Remarkable Life of Brigadier General Alfred Command Decisions in America’s Civil War Jefferson Vaughan Jr. LAWRENCE K. PETERSON Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-951-4 $59t

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Decisions at Stones River The Sixteen Critical Decisions That Defined the Battle MATT SPRUILL AND LEE SPRUILL MAPS BY TIM KISSEL Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-378-9 eISBN 978-1-62190-379-6 Kindle ISBN 978-1-62190-385-7 $29.95t Each book in the Command Decisions in America’s Civil War series introduces a major engagement in the Civil War—focusing not on the what of warfare, but on the why. As the drama unfolds, readers discover how decisions made by Union and Confederate Command officers create the battle’s outcome. Decisionsin America’s Civil War Forthcoming books in the series will investigate decisions made at Perryville, Tullahoma, Shiloh, and other notable battles both in the Eastern and Western theaters of the Civil War.

Decisions at Chickamauga Decisions at The Twenty-four Critical Decisions Second Manassas That Defined the Battle The Fourteen DAVE POWELL Critical Decisions MAPS BY DAVID FRIEDRICHS That Defined the Battle Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-411-3 MATT SPRUILL III AND Kindle ISBN 978-1-62190-412-0 MATT SPRUILL IV eISBN 978-1-62190-413-7 MAPS BY TIM KISSEL $29.95t Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-380-2 eISBN 978-1-62190-381-9 Kindle ISBN 978-1-62190-396-3 $29.95t

University of Tennessee Press Fall/Winter 2018–2019 11 Order online at utpress.org or call 800-621-2736

High Private The Trans-Mississippi Correspondence of Humorist R. R. Gilbert, 1862–1865

EDITED BY MARY M. CRONIN

Rensselaer Reed Gilbert was one of the most prolific newspaper correspondents during the years of the U. S. Civil War. He penned several hundred news and editorial columns, as well as comic sketches, for the Houston Tri-Weekly Telegraph. An ardent Confederate nationalist, Gilbert was a strong supporter of states’ rights and the economic institution of slavery, despite the fact that he was a transplant from Vermont. High Private, titled Hardcover ISBN 978-1-62190-445-8 after Gilbert’s newspaper persona, expands research into the field of Civil War-era humor eISBN 978-1-62190-446-5 $50s writing and news reporting. Mary M. Cronin’s extensive look at Gilbert’s life and work introduces readers to the forgotten voice of a Trans-Mississippi comic, correspondent, and AVAILABLE OCTOBER 2018 Southern advocate. Civil War, Journalism To date, humor research during the Civil War has focused on a limited canon of the nineteenth century’s leading comic voices. High Private not only provides new insight into this form of journalism but also addresses humor produced while the author was in uniform. When he returned to civilian life, Gilbert wrote chiefly from various military commanders’ headquarters. His work records the social and political experiences of soldiers and civilians living in the Trans-Mississippi region, especially after it was cut off from the rest of the Confederacy following the capture of New Orleans in 1862. ALSO OF INTEREST Through and , Gilbert’s often sharp pen revealed uncomfortable truths, attacked sentimentality and pretension, provided emotional release for those living in the Trans-Mississippi area—particularly Texas, Louisiana, and Arkansas—and served as a critical voice for the region. That Gilbert remains readable today is a testament to his imagination, creativity, and power of observation. In writing about a journalist who covered both military and civilian affairs, Cronin reveals not only a talented writer but alsoan understudied region in the American Civil War through the keen eyes and pen of a working journalist.

MARY M. CRONIN is an associate professor in the Department of Journalism and Mass Communications at New Mexico State University. She is the coauthor, with Charles Scholz, of The Mass Media: Invention, Development, Application, Little to Eat and and Impact and editor of An Indispensable Liberty: The Fight for Free Speech in Thin Mud to Drink Letters, Diaries, and Memoirs Nineteenth-Century America. from the Red River Campaigns, 1863–1864 EDITED BY GARY D. JOINER Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-195-2 $34.95t

12 Confederate Generals in the Trans-Mississippi, Volume 3 Essays on America’s Civil War

EDITED BY LAWRENCE LEE HEWITT AND THOMAS E. SCHOTT FOREWORD BY DANIEL E. SUTHERLAND

Far removed from the main centers of commerce and population, and thus remote from the priorities of Confederate political leaders in the East, the Trans-Mississippi Theater experienced a different sort of war during America’s great fratricidal conflict of 1861–1865. Not only was its distance from Richmond a distinguishing factor, but it was also a theater where the Union army and gained a foothold far sooner than elsewhere in the South, Cloth ISBN 978-1-62190-454-0 Kindle ISBN 978-1-62190-455-7 first in Missouri and then in Louisiana and the Mississippi River Valley. Confederate eISBN 978-1-62190-456-4 generals were tasked with ousting, not merely halting, an enemy closing from two $64.95t directions; guerrilla warfare was more often the norm than the exception; and the shortage AVAILABLE JANUARY 2019 of men and materiel was a constant problem. Civil War The third volume of Confederate Generals in the Trans-Mississippi offers eight new essays on generals engaged in the effort to secure a region whose unique challenges would have daunted the best of commanders. Included here are Joseph G. Dawson III on Earl Van Dorn’s efforts to bring order to the chaos of the Trans-Mississippi District and how his experiences affected his battlefield performance in 1862; Jeffery M. Prushankin on the administrative nightmares facing Edmund Kirby Smith when he assumed responsibility ALSO OF INTEREST for the region in 1863; and Richard Holloway on the formidable army commander Richard Taylor and the all-but-forgotten effort to move Confederate troops east of the Mississippi in 1864. Essays on Hamilton Prioleau Bee, James Fleming Fagan, William Robertson Boggs, Tom Green, and Austin Wharton round out the collection. Like its predecessors, this new volume brings splendid research and a wealth of new insight and analysis to bear on an aspect of the Civil War whose historical significance has too long been overshadowed by the events farther east.

LAWRENCE LEE HEWITT is professor emeritus of history at Southeastern Louisiana University. He is the author of Port Hudson: Confederate Bastion on the Mississippi, among other publications, and his honors include the Charles L. Dufour Award for outstanding achievements in preserving the heritage of the American Civil War. Confederate Generals in the Trans-Mississippi, THOMAS E. SCHOTT is a retired historian of the Air Force and US Special Volume 2 Operations Command. Besides the American Civil War, he has edited and EDITED BY LAWRENCE LEE published work in various fields, including baseball, theology, and poetry. His HEWITT AND THOMAS E. SCHOTT Cloth ISBN 978-1-62190-089-4 biography Alexander H. Stephens of Georgia won the Jefferson Davis Award for $64.95t Best Book on the Confederacy.

UniversityUniversity of of Tennessee Tennessee Press Press Fall/WinterSpring/Summer 2018–2019 2015 13

Order online at utpress.org or call 800-621-2736

Well researched and based mainly on primary sources, For Duty and Honor will be a Courtesy of David Wright “notable contribution to Tennessee history and the history of the Mexican War.” —Jonathan Atkins, author of Parties, Politics, and the Sectional Conflict in Tennessee, 1832–1861

For Duty and Honor Tennessee’s Mexican War Experience

TIMOTHY D. JOHNSON

The outbreak of the American Civil War was destined to cast a long shadow over the earlier, shorter Mexican-American War (1846–1848), as evidenced by today’s relatively slight historiography on the conflict. As for Tennessee’s role in the war, history remembers little more than its large contribution of volunteers and subsequent state moniker as “The Volunteer State.” Today, beliefs persist that the Mexican-American War was simply a Hardcover colossal land grab for the United States in its pursuit of the doctrine of Manifest Destiny, ISBN 978-1-62190-438-0 Kindle ISBN 978-1-62190-439-7 and that Tennesseans enlisted to protect and expand the institution of slavery. As eISBN 978-1-62190-440-3 Timothy D. Johnson notes in For Duty and Honor, these stereotypes do not characterize $39.95t the motives of Tennesseans. Through a succinct examination of journals, memoirs, and AVAILABLE DECEMBER 2018 letters from the conflict, Johnson reveals that Tennesseans volunteered out of a sense of duty and honor—principles that were deeply embedded in the early national period. Nineteenth-Century History, Military History They also enlisted because of family and community expectations as well as a desire to demonstrate manhood and courage. In the process, Johnson provides much-needed historical and political context for the Mexican-American War. For Duty and Honor treats not only Tennessee’s unique role in the conflict, but also the postwar efforts by veterans to shape the war’s legacy. Using clear, accessible language and groundbreaking ALSO OF INTEREST research, Johnson resurrects an all-but-forgotten moment in Tennessee’s rich history.

TIMOTHY D. JOHNSON is professor of history and University Research Professor at Lipscomb University in Nashville, Tennessee. He received his PhD from the University of Alabama in 1989 and has published extensively on military history in the antebellum period. He is the author or editor of numerous articles, and six previous books including three on the Mexican-American War. His Notes of the Mexican War, 1846–1848, along with Memoirs of Lieut. General Winfield Scott, both were published by the University of Tennessee Press. In addition, he has been a research fellow at Yale University and the Virginia Historical Society.

Notes of the Mexican War, 1846–1848 J. Jacob Oswandel EDITED BY TIMOTHY D. JOHNSON AND NATHANIEL CHEAIRS HUGHES JR. Cloth ISBN 978-1-57233-703-9 $54.95s

14 In Memory of Self and Comrades Thomas Wallace Colley’s Recollections of Civil War Service in the 1st Virginia Cavalry

EDITED BY MICHAEL K. SHAFFER

Thomas W. Colley served in one of the most active and famous units in the Civil War, the 1st Virginia Cavalry, which fought in battles in the Eastern Theater, from First Manassas/Bull Run to the defense of Petersburg. Colley was born November 11, 1837, outside Abingdon, Virginia, and grew up knowing the daily demands of life on a farm. In May 1861, along with the other members of the Washington Mounted Rifles, he left his home in Washington County and reported to camp in Richmond. During the war, Colley received wounds on Hardcover ISBN 978-1-62190-430-4 eISBN 978-1-62190-431-1 three different occasions: first at Waterloo Bridge in 1862, again at Kelly’s Ford in 1863, and Kindle ISBN 978-1-62190-432-8 finally at Haw’s Shop in 1864. The engagement at Haw’s Shop resulted in the amputation of $47t his left foot, thereby ending his wartime service. AVAILABLE DECEMBER 2018 The first modern scholarly edition of Colley’s writings, In Memory of Self and Civil War Comrades dramatizes Colley’s fate as a wounded soldier mustered out before the war’s conclusion. Colley’s postwar reflections on the war reveal his struggle to earn a living and maintain his integrity while remaining somewhat unreconciled to his condition. He found much of his solace through writing and sought to advance his education after the war. As one of an estimated 20,000 soldiers who underwent amputation during the Civil War, his memoirs reveal the challenges of living with what many might recognize today ALSO OF INTEREST as post-traumatic stress disorder. Annotations from editor Michael K. Shaffer provide further context to Colley’s colorful and insightful writings on both his own condition and the condition of other veterans also dealing with amputations.

MICHAEL K. SHAFFER is an instructor at Kennesaw State University’s College of Continuing and Professional Education. He is the author of Washington County, Virginia, in the Civil War.

Memoirs of the Stuart Voices of the Civil War Horse Artillery Battalion Michael P. Gray, Series Editor Volumes 1 and 2 EDITED BY ROBERT J. TROUT Cloth ISBN, Vol. 1, 978-1-57233-605-6 $45t Cloth ISBN, Vol. 2, 978-1-57233-706-0 $49.95s

University of Tennessee Press Fall/Winter 2018–2019 15 Order online at utpress.org or call 800-621-2736

Phyllis Graber Jensen / Bates College

John Edgar Wideman and Modernity A Critical Dialogue

MICHEL FEITH

The career of writer John Edgar Wideman has been the sort of success story on which America prides itself. Coming from an inner-city African American neighborhood, he studied at the Universities of Pennsylvania and Oxford; published his first novel at age twenty-six; won two PEN/Faulkner Awards, as well as a MacArthur “genius grant”; and has held several top teaching posts. But profound tragedy has also Hardcover ISBN 978-1-62190-433-5 marked his life: both his brother and son received life sentences for murder, and a eISBN 978-1-62190-434-2 $45s nephew was killed at home after a bar fight. His life thus illustrates how the strictures of “race” temper American notions of freedom and opportunity. AVAILABLE DECEMBER 2018 Wideman’s engagement with race and identity has been nuanced and complex, Literary Criticism taking the form of what Michel Feith sees as a critical dialogue with modernity–a moment in history which gave birth not only to the Enlightenment but also to American slavery and the conundrum of “race,” and which continues to overshadow the contemporary period. Feith argues that the key work in the Wideman oeuvre is The Cattle Killing (1996), his only “historical novel,” whose threads include the 1793 yellow fever epidemic in Philadelphia, the 1856–57 Cattle Killing prophecy, which wreaked havoc among the Xhosa tribe of South Africa, and the contemporary ALSO OF INTEREST situation of black ghettos in the United States. Unfolding within the early days of the American Republic, the novel offers a window through which all of Wideman’s works and their central concerns—ghettoization, imprisonment, familial relationships, emancipation, and the diasporic sense of history—can be understood. With clarity and theoretical sophistication, Feith offers provocative new readings of Wideman’s texts, from the “Homewood” books based on his youth in Pittsburgh to his haunting memoir Brothers and Keepers, while illuminating the complexities of his style. In the “postmodern” era, Feith suggests, critics of modernity are not in short supply, but few have the depth, rigor, and thoughtfulness of John Edgar Wideman.

MICHEL FEITH, a professor of American literature at the University of Nantes, France, is coeditor, with Geneviève Fabre, of Jean Toomer and the Critical Essays on Harlem Renaissance and Temples for Tomorrow: Looking Back at the Harlem John Edgar Wideman EDITED BY BONNIE TUSMITH Renaissance. His articles have appeared in the Canadian Review of American AND KEITH E. BYERMAN Studies, Callaloo, and other publications. Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-466-3 $42s

16 The Library of Congress

The Ideological Origins of African American Literature

PHILLIP M. RICHARDS

Inquiry into African American literature in recent decades has neglected to probe the intellectual structure of the tradition’s aesthetics and its underlying ideology. In The Ideological Origins of African American Literature, Phillip M. Richards begins this reconstructive work, illuminating the dialectical backstory of black prose and poetry in America. Richards argues that the social and political forces that influenced white literature were uniquely reacted to, absorbed, and often times rejected by African American Hardcover ISBN 978-1-62190-458-8 eISBN 978-1-62190-459-5 literary figures—from the eighteenth-century Puritan notions of a God-centered history $49.95s to the onset of Romanticism and Modernism in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. AVAILABLE JANUARY 2019 Building his case for ideological continuity, Richards surveys a profoundly creative period of 125 years launched by an African American reaction against a racist, mid-eighteenth- Literary Criticism century American culture. This epoch in African American literature saw a fusion of Puritan-Protestant culture into a religious and secular worldview, drawing in the poetry of Phillis Wheatley, antebellum slave narratives, Richard Allen, and the periodicals of the ambitious African Methodist Episcopalian movement—all of which would form the underlying foundation of a black Victorian culture. A rising black middle class, Richards argues, would later be secularized by an eroding religious tradition under the pressures ALSO OF INTEREST of nineteenth-century modernity, the trauma of Jim Crow, and the emerging northern ghetto. Richards further traces the emergence of Romanticism which appeared with white American authors such as Emerson, Thoreau, and Whitman, but would not take shape in African American literature until the likes of W.E.B. Du Bois and Langston Hughes took stock of Anglo-European culture at the end of the nineteenth century. The Ideological Origins of African American Literature illustrates a pattern of black writing that eschews the hegemonic white culture of the day for an evolving black culture that would define an American literary landscape.

PHILLIP M. RICHARDS is a professor (emeritus) in the English department at Colgate University. He is the author of Black Heart: The Moral Life of Recent African American Letters and An Integrated Boyhood: Coming of Age in White Cleveland. The American Aeneas Classical Origins of the American Self JOHN C. SHIELDS Paper ISBN 978-1-57233-369-7 $39.95s

University of Tennessee Press Fall/Winter 2018–2019 17

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Guide to the Historic Coal Towns of the Big Sandy River Valley Revised Edition with a new Afterword GEORGE D. TOROK Intended as a Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-420-5 guidebook . . . not . . . a $55t definitive history or as an exhaustive guide, Guide to the Historic Coal Towns of the Big Sandy River Valley still offers its readers more than a basic facts list about the world that used to exist along U.S. routes 119, 23, and 52 (xiii). Utilizing a variety of primary and secondary sources, Torok crafts a well-organized and engaging narrative that journeys through the Big Sandy communities most affected by the coal boom of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century.” —Dr. Rebecca Bailey, Associate Professor of History, Northern Kentucky University Androgynous Democracy Modern American Literature and the Dual-Sexed Body Politic AARON SHAHEEN Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-427-4 $28.95s

The DNA of Nashville as it exists today was first formed in the decades following the Civil War. Mary Ellen Pethel begins at this critical moment in Nashville’s history and examines the evolution of college and city life. Commerce and local collegiate institutions have long been partners in shaping our city, and Athens of the New South is a timely reminder of that great history.” —Ralph Schulz, President of Nashville Athens of New South Chamber of Commerce College Life and the Making of Modern Nashville MARY ELLEN PETHEL Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-457-1 Critical Essays on $39.95s John Edgar Wideman EDITED BY BONNIE TUSMITH AND KEITH E. BYERMAN Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-466-3 $42s

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More than just an assembly of various disciplinary components, Landscape Archaeology uses aspects The text of landscape, ethnobotany, is well anthropology, palynology, written and and traditional historical organized, research to investigate and and the interpret human interaction study is of with the land.” great social importance —Journal of Southern History for educators and education scholars.” Landscape Archaeology Reading and Interpreting the —Jon N. Hale, American Historical Landscape Muskingum First Edition with a new Preface University EDITED BY REBECCA YAMIN AND KAREN METHENY Opportunity Lost Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-467-0 Race and Poverty in the Memphis $45.95t City Schools With a New Preface MARCUS D. POHLMANN Paper ISBN 978-1-57233-716-9 $29.95s

Based on years of intensive fieldwork and astute interpretation, This memoir illuminates Joseph Sciorra’s Built key aspects of the with Faith brushes aside war experience: the the simple stereotype enthusiasm for fighting, ‘bathtub Virgin’ to tensions with officers, illuminate the complex tedium with regard to religious lives of Italian noncombatant work, American New Yorkers. the variety of trench Sciorra offers a rich experiences, the sharp portrait of a little-known learning curve that the but resonant feature army underwent on the of New York’s cultural ground, and the confusing landscape that will nature of combat for fascinate scholars and The World War I Memoirs ground troops. As the general readers alike.” of Robert P. Patterson centennial of the war A Captain in the Great War approaches this well —Dell Upton, Professor of GARY J. CLIFFORD annotated memoir that Architectural History at Built with Faith connects Patterson’s UCLA and author of Another Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-468-7 Italian American Imagination $31.95s individual experiences to City: Urban Life and Urban and Catholic Material Culture the larger U.S. experience Spaces in the New American in New York City of the war will appeal Republic JOSEPH SCIORRA to general readers and Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-383-3 specialists alike.” $32s —Jennifer D. Keene, author of World War I: The American Soldier Experience

University of Tennessee Press Fall/Winter 2018–2019 19 Order online at utpress.org Col. Reuben F. Maury, commanding or call 800-621-2736 officer, First Oregon Cavalry. Courtesy of the Oregon Historical Society.

Hardcover ISBN 978-1-62190-367-3 eISBN 978-1-62190-368-0 $45s

AVAILABLE NOVEMBER 2018

Civil War, Nineteenth-Century History

PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED

On Duty in the Pacific Paper Northwest during the Civil War ISBN 978-0-89587-352-1 $19.95t Correspondence and Reminiscences of the First Oregon Cavalry Regiment AVAILABLE NOW

Religion Tennessee Studies EDITED BY JAMES ROBBINS JEWELL

James Robbins Jewell has expanded the scope of the voices of the Civil The Serpent Handlers War by widening the field to the Pacific Northwest, where the war mattered far more than those in the East may have known or cared. The result is a book Three Families and Their Faith that captures what military service is often like: the excitement mixed with drudgery, and the desire for action and the distance from it.” FRED BROWN AND JEANNE MCDONALD —Michael Green, author of Lincoln and the Election of 1860

Church members who take Mark 16:17-18 as a From 1862 to 1865, twenty-six hundred miles away from the seat of the central tenant of their faith call themselves Signs federal government in Washington, DC, the First Oregon Volunteer Cav- Followers. Previous accounts of the Signs Followers alry Regiment offered aid to the Union cause in the American Civil War. focused on sensational aspects of religion: picking The First Oregon Cavalry confronted a host of complex challenges unseen up poisonous snakes, drinking strychnine, speak- by their counterparts serving in a more traditional role in the East. Their ing in tongues. battles were more often with Native Americans—and often more concerned Within these churches are several families with their own status in the territory than with the Civil War rending the whose history in the tradition stretches back as far nation—while searching for pro-Confederate spies and sympathizers. How- as the religion itself, which dates only to 1910. In ever unsung during the war, the regiment carried out their responsibilities The Serpent Handlers, Fred Brown uses extensive successfully, managing to expedite the development of the Pacific North- interviews with the participants to tell the stories of west in the process. three of the most prominent snake handling fami- On Duty in the Pacific Northwest during the Civil War introduces lies—the Brown family of Cocke County, Tennes- readers to the first regiment from the Pacific Northwest to serve the Union see, the Elkins family of Jolo, West Virginia, and cause. James Robbins Jewell offers a glimpse into the lives of these soldiers, the Coots family of Middlesboro, Kentucky. presenting their wartime letters to various northwesterners to share their experiences with loved ones at home. Complete with a series of reminiscences and excerpts from memoirs by FRED BROWN, a feature writer with the First Oregon Cavalry officers and soldiers,On Duty in the Pacific Northwest Knoxville News-Sentinel, is a member of the Scripps Howard Hall of Fame. during the Civil War is the first collection of primary source materials from soldiers serving in this Far Western territory. Jewell’s first-rate collection JEANNE MCDONALD is a recipient of the enables readers to step directly into the Pacific Northwest of the early 1860s Tennessee Arts Commission/Alex Haley and experience the Civil War from a different perspective. Fiction Fellowship and a Washington Prize for Fiction. She lives in Knoxville, Tennessee. JAMES ROBBINS JEWELL is the History Program chair at North Idaho College. He is the author of numerous articles on the Civil War and the American West.

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Newonline resource

On May 1, 2018, the Tennessee Historical Society, in conjunction with the University of Tennessee Press, released the Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture online version 3.0. The revamped encyclopedia includes new and updated entries, a new introductory essay by Tennessee state historian and encyclopedia editor, Carroll Van West, and a new and more user-friendly interface and search function. Version 3.0 will prove to be an indispensable resource for students, teachers, and the interested public. This definitive reference has been available since 2002, when it was one of the very first state encyclopedias to become an online resource.

University of Tennessee Press Fall/Winter 2018–2019 21 Order online at utpress.org or call 800-621-2736

John C. Brown of Tennessee Rebel, Redeemer, and Railroader William Strickland SAM DAVIS ELLIOTT and the Creation of an Hardcover ISBN American Architecture 978-1-62190-287-4 ROBERT RUSSELL eISBN Hardcover ISBN 978-1-62190-346-8 978-1-62190-288-1 eISBN 978-1-62190-347-5 Kindle ISBN $60s 978-1-62190-289-8 $43s

William Strickland and the Creation of an Winner of American Architecture is Tennessee well researched and well History Book written and filled with Award careful descriptions and insightful analyses of Strickland’s work.” —Michael W. Fazio, professor Sam Davis Elliott has written a emeritus, Mississippi State needed and thorough biography University of Tennessean John C. Brown, an important but often forgotten figure of the Civil War era. As a general in the Army of Tennessee, probable leader of the Ku Klux Klan, governor of Tennessee and railroad executive, Brown was directly involved in many of the most vital issues of his time and helped Cormac McCarthy’s shape the future of not just Violent Destinies Tennessee but the nation.” The Poetics of —Andrew L. Slap, author of Doom Determinism and Fatalism of Reconstruction: The Liberal EDITED BY BRAD BANNON Republicans of the Civil War Era AND JOHN VANDERHEIDE Hardcover ISBN 978-1-62190-382-6 This volume, which reflects eISBN 978-1-62190-416-8 those discoveries about $60s Hammon’s life and work that have taken place since Ransom’s earlier collection, will enable scholars, instructors, students, and other interested readers The authors provide ready access to the most critical insight up-to-date assessment into the issues and and presentation of this controversies facing pioneering African American decision-makers in author’s body of work.” Tennessee. This book —Ajuan Maria Mance, editor of is well grounded in Before Harlem: An Anthology of the state’s history African American Literature from and culture.” the Long Nineteenth Century —Knoxville Mayor The Collected Works of Madeleine Rogero Jupiter Hammon Poems and Essays EDITED BY CEDRICK MAY Hardcover ISBN 978-1-62190-329-1 Government and Politics eISBN 978-1-62190-331-4 in Tennessee Kindle ISBN 978-1-62190-330-7 Second Edition $34.95s WILLIAM LYONS, JOHN M. SCHEB II, WILLIAM K. STAIR, AND JOSEPH GREGORY JARRET Paper ISBN 978-1-62190-348-2 eISBN 978-1-62190-350-5 Kindle ISBN 978-1-62190-349-9 $29.95s 22 This book is much more than a tome about the incredible amount of harm done to children isolated The Yankees have in destructive groups and connected with movements; it is a testimony American culture to the courage and resilience for a century, and of individual souls, even Will Bishop has done when they are very young . . . readers and fans Whispering in the Daylight a great service by is compelling for anyone documenting it all in concerned with child welfare one volume. Pinstripe and individual freedom.” Nation is a fine addition —Steve K. D. Eichel, president, to Yankee literature.” International Cultic Studies —Marty Appel, author of Association Pinstripe Empire: The New York Yankees from Before Whispering in the Daylight the Babe to After the Boss The Children of Tony Alamo Christian Ministries and Their Journey to Freedom Pinstripe Nation The New York Yankees DEBBY SCHRIVER in American Culture Cloth ISBN 978-1-62190-386-4 WILL BISHOP Kindle ISBN 978-1-62190-387-1 Hardcover ISBN eISBN 978-1-62190-388-8 978-1-62190-401-4 $29.95t Kindle ISBN 978-1-62190-402-1 eISBN 978-1-62190-403-8 $35.95s

Cormac McCarthy’s Violent Destinies Holly Blackford’s From The Poetics of Alice to Algernon makes Determinism and Fatalism a significant contribution EDITED BY BRAD BANNON to our understanding of AND JOHN VANDERHEIDE the development of the Hardcover modern novel. It smartly ISBN 978-1-62190-382-6 and effectively situates eISBN 978-1-62190-416-8 interdisciplinary children’s $60s studies at the center of that understanding, drawing connections between the trends in intellectual history to theorize human nature and the evolutionary paradigm that has permeated and driven those trends. Her research base is impressive, and her choice of primary texts through Cormac McCarthy’s Violent which to trace her ideas Destinies is an intelligently represents the best uses assembled, thoughtful, and of canonical but at times original collection of essays that, overlooked works.” together, form a useful point of reference in the literature that is —Karen Coats, professor greater than the sum of its parts. From Alice to Algernon of English, Illinois State Indeed, as a good collection should, The Evolution of Child University this one provides both nuance and Consciousness in the Novel variety, and the editors focus the HOLLY BLACKFORD spotlight tightly on their themes Hardcover ISBN illuminating McCarthy’s richly 978-1-62190-399-4 productive fiction.” eISBN 978-1-62190-400-7 $50s —Nicholas Monk, director of Warwick University’s Centre for Innovation in Teaching and Learning and author of True and Living Prophet of Destruction: Cormac McCarthy and Modernity

University of Tennessee Press Fall/Winter 2018–2019 23 ONLINE AT UTPRESS.ORG / 800-621-2736

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______978-1-62190-424-3 Brown, Rufus, p. 4 $34.95s ______978-0-89587-352-1 Brown, The Serpent Handlers, p. 20 $19.95t ______978-1-62190-453-3 Cheathem, Andrew Jackson and the Rise of the Democratic . . . , p. 7 $24.95s ______978-1-62190-449-6 Collier, Wonderful Weeds and Various Varmints, p. 2 $26t ______978-1-62190-445-8 Cronin, High Private, p. 12 $50s ______978-1-62190-433-5 Feith, John Edgar Wideman and Modernity, p. 16 $45s ______978-1-62190-435-9 Haltom/Swanson, Full Court Press, p. 1 $19.95t ______978-1-62190-454-0 Hewitt/Schott, Confederate Generals Trans-Miss, Vol.3 . . . , p. 13 $64.95t ______978-1-62190-451-9 Himler, The Making of an American, p. 8 $34.95s ______978-1-62190-367-3 Jewell, On Duty in the Pacific Northwest . . ., p. 20 $45s ______978-1-62190-438-0 Johnson, For Duty and Honor, p. 14 $39.95t ______978-1-62190-447-2 Kiewe, Andrew Jackson, p. 6 $39.95s ______978-1-62190-460-1 Lamb, Overton Park, p. 9 $24.95t ______978-1-62190-421-2 Peterson, Decisions at Chattanooga, p. 10 $29.95t ______978-1-62190-458-8 Richards, The Ideological Origins of African American . . . , p. 17 $49.95s ______978-1-62190-430-4 Shaffer, In Memory of Self and Comrades, p. 15 $47t ______

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