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The Civil War in 50 Objects by Harold Holzer and New-York Historical Society
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The Civil War in 50 Objects

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The Civil War in 50 Objects by Harold Holzer and New-York Historical Society
Paperback $20.00
May 05, 2015 | ISBN 9780143128144

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    May 05, 2015 | ISBN 9780143128144

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  • May 02, 2013 | ISBN 9781101613115

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Praise

“In his new book, The Civil War in 50 Objects, Harold Holzer uses pictures of a fascinating menagerie of Civil War-related items to distill what historian Eric Foner calls in his introduction a conflict that ‘permanently affected the future course of the development of the United States. Holzer handles the task with ease, showcasing the era through such artifacts as a pair of slave’s shackles sized for the wrists of a child and a copy, signed by Abraham Lincoln, of the manuscript for the 13th Amendment..”The Washington Post
 
“Packaged in an unusually high-quality edition, this book is the next best thing to viewing the artifacts in person or, given Holzer’s thorough explanation of the history of each object, it might be even better.”—The Seattle Times
 
“Holzer’s essays educate and entertain, folding in noteworthy asides….  Holzer pieces [the objects] together to create a compelling story of the people who lived during the bloodiest war in American history — a war that jumped the boundaries of the battlefield to spark a race riot on July 10, 1863.”—The Chicago Tribune
 
The Civil War in 50 Objects is a collection of deeply researched essays by the Lincoln scholar Harold Holzer.  Mr. Holzer examines war-era artifacts culled from the collection at the New-York Historical Society, where he is a Roger Hertog Fellow, to get at a deeper truth about the single most defining event in American history.”—New York Observer
 
“Holzer, working through the archives of the New-York Historical Society, unearths treasures, if sometimes grim ones.  Holzer’s choice of objects is spot-on, and the anecdotes they occasion are even more so, particularly when he turns to little-commemorated episodes such as the valiant charge of 14 New York dragoons against a much larger Confederate force (it did not end well for the dragoons) and the effect of the Union blockade on school primers in the South.  A valuable addition to the popular literature of the Civil War, well-conceived and packaged.”—Kirkus

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