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- The Journal of the Civil War Era
- The University of North Carolina Press
- issue
- Volume 6, Number 1, March 2016
- Contributors
- Books Received
- Civil War Canon: Sites of Confederate Memory in South Carolina by Thomas J. Brown (review)
- The Civil War as Global Conflict: Transnational Meanings of the American Civil War ed. by David T. Gleeson and Simon Lewis (review)
- Shrill Hurrrahs: Women, Gender, and Racial Violence in South Carolina, 1865–1900 by Kate Côté Gillin (review)
- The Great New Orleans Kidnapping Case: Race, Law, and Justice in the Reconstruction Era by Michael A. Ross (review)
- The Life and Death of Gus Reed: A Story of Race and Justice in Illinois during the Civil War and Reconstruction by Thomas Bahde (review)
- Civil War Wests: Testing the Limits of the United States ed. by Adam Arenson and Andrew R. Graybill, and: Empire and Liberty: The Civil War and the West ed. by Virginia Scharff (review)
- After Appomattox: Military Occupation and the Ends of War by Gregory P. Downs (review)
- Mourning Lincoln by Martha Hodes (review)
- Rebels against the Confederacy: North Carolina’s Unionists by Barton A. Myers (review)
- Civil War Infantry Tactics: Training, Combat, and Small-Unit Effectiveness by Earl J. Hess (review)
- Emilie Davis’s Civil War: The Diaries of a Free Black Woman in Philadelphia, 1863–1865 ed. by Judith Giesberg, and: Notes from a Colored Girl: The Civil War Pocket Diaries of Emilie Frances Davis by Karsonya Wise Whitehead (review)
- Surveillance and Spies in the Civil War: Exposing Confederate Conspiracies in America’s Heartland by Stephen E. Towne (review)
- The Cause of All Nations: An International History of the American Civil War by Don H. Doyle (review)
- Gender and Race in Antebellum Popular Culture by Sarah N. Roth (review)
- Intellectual Manhood: University, Self, and Society in the Antebellum South by Timothy J. Williams (review)
- The Business of Slavery and the Rise of American Capitalism, 1815–1860 by Calvin Schermerhorn (review)
- Mission Impossible: Reconstruction Policy Reconsidered
- The Unpredictable America of William Gwin: Expansion, Secession, and the Unstable Borders of Nineteenth-Century North America
- “They Cover the Land Like the Locusts of Egypt”: Fugitive Federal Prisoners of War and the Collapse of the Confederacy
- The Local, National, and International Politics of Slavery: Edward Everett’s Nomination as U.S. Minister to Great Britain
- Editor’s Note
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