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  • Published: 15 December 2016
  • ISBN: 9781590174463
  • Imprint: NY Review Books
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 624
  • RRP: $65.00
Categories:

Reveille in Washington

1860-1865




Winner of the Pulitzer Prize
Featuring a foreword by Battle Cry of Freedom author James McPherson

A vibrant portrait of Civil War-era Washington, D.C. that is “packed and running over with the anecdotes, scandals, personalities, and tragi-comedies of the day”—from the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for History (The New Yorker)
 
1860: The American capital is sprawling, fractured, squalid, colored by patriotism and treason, and deeply divided along the political lines that will soon embroil the nation in bloody conflict. Chaotic and corrupt, the young city is populated by bellicose congressmen, Confederate conspirators, and enterprising prostitutes. Soldiers of a volunteer army swing from the dome of the Capitol, assassins stalk the avenues, and Abraham Lincoln struggles to justify his presidency as the Union heads to war. 

Reveille in Washington focuses on the everyday politics and preoccupations of Washington during the Civil War. From the stench of corpse-littered streets to the plunging lace on Mary Lincoln’s evening gowns, Margaret Leech illuminates the city and its familiar figures—among them Abraham Lincoln, Jefferson Davis, Robert E. Lee, William Seward, and Mary Surratt—in intimate and fascinating detail. 

Leech’s book remains widely recognized as both an impressive feat of scholarship and an uncommonly engrossing work of history.


“The best single popular account of Washington during the great convulsion of the Civil War.” —The Washington Post

  • Published: 15 December 2016
  • ISBN: 9781590174463
  • Imprint: NY Review Books
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 624
  • RRP: $65.00
Categories:

About the author

Margaret Leech

Margaret Leech (1893–1974) was an American historian, novelist and dramatist. She twice received the Pulitzer Prize in history, for Reveille in Washington (1942) and In the Days of McKinley (1960); with the former she became the first woman to receive a Pulitzer in that category.

Praise for Reveille in Washington

  • "She has been reading the minutest records of Washington through the duration of our greatest conflict. The result is astonishing, and no one will read this book without pausing at every chapter to reflect on then and now--on the continuity, as well as the expansion of American history: and on the extraordinary analogies, in both good and bad actions, between the emergency period of our grandparents and our own.... It is a Washington in panic...a Washington which reads like the drunken dream of a gossip columnist.... Here the reader can learn how our ancestors...received the news of events that to us are history.... Miss Leech has gone to the newspapers they then read in Washington, and the letters they wrote, and the diaries they kept, for vivid and intimate detail.... This book describes how the great experience looked and felt in Washington." --The Book-of-the-Month Club