Grant Takes Command

Local pick-up preferred (please call first (54) 788-4344) but will ship at the buyers expense.Kingston Books 14 IMG_5987 100.00 or Best OfferNote The book jacket is tattered but the book itself is in excellent condition.Author Bruce CattonPublisher Little Brown and CompanyNote Included with this book is a typed letter never mailed signed in pen Es (Esther). It seems that author has become withdrawn emotionally from her. She reaches out to him in this letter to ask him what to do about their problem. An excerpt You are not happy that I know. Your eyes are sad you laugh is a sad laugh. It breaks my heart to see you this way. You find it extremely hard to use words of endearment at anytime of the day or night over the phone or in a person-to-person situation. I feel as if I were treading on glass it s much too much a dangerous situation to keep on this way. As I told you before I want to walk high knowing that if nothing else on this earth is solid the love of my husband is for me is. As you said to me I say to you I love you I need you and I will always want you. I hope and pray that the same holds true for you. s en.wikipedia.org wiki Bruce_CattonForewordAfter the capture of Vicksburg on July 3 1863 Grant s army starts a period of occupation absorbing its conquest of the Mississippi valley. In the east the army of the Potomac rests after its great victory at Gettysburg. In central Tennessee the Federal Army of the Cumberland is moving to drive the Confederate forces back into Georgia. The federal government in Washington sensing a turning point in the war starts to cast about for the best path to final victory. As the authorities begin this task they realize that their most successful soldier is the only one they know least about.List of MapsRailroad Network in the Tennessee Theater of WarChattanooga Battlefield and the Cracker Line The Railroads of Virginia and Grant s Plan of Campaign for 1864Routes from the Wilderness to Spotsylvania C.H. (campaign headquarters)The Advance to the James RiverCold Harbor to PetersburgThe Petersburg BattlefieldsTheater of Pursuit from Petersburg to AppomattoxContents by ChapterPolitical Innocence The Road to Chattanooga I Have Never Felt Such Restlessness Before The Miracle on Missionary Ridge The Enemy Have Not Got Army Enough The High Place Continue to Be Yourself Campaign Plans and Politics The Fault is not with You In the Wilderness If it Takes all Summer Beyond The Bloody Angle Roll On Like a Wave On the Banks of the James A Question of Time So Fair and Opportunity Roughshod or on Tiptoe The Hundred-Gun Salutes I Will Work This Thing Out Yet Much Is Now Expected A Letter From General Lee I Feel now Like Ending the Matter Our Countrymen Again Stranger in a Strange LandNotes Notes Bibliography Acknowledgements Index Hardcover with jacket 556 pages Library of Congress Card Catalog Number 69-12632

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