Sunday, September 19, 2010
Review of Nathaniel Philbrick's Novel
The Last Stand: Custer, Sitting Bull, and The Battle of the Little Bighorn
As every schoolboy knows, George Armstrong Custer and 230 men of his beloved 7th Cavalry were massacred on June 25th 1876, by Indians led by Chief Sitting Bull at the battle of the Little Bighorn.
Much has been written of this battle and the men involved. Custer's widow, Libby devoted the remainder of her life to assuring her husband's enshrinement as a hero. Buffalo Bill Cody immortalized Custer and Sitting Bull in his traveling Wild West show when he ended each performance with a reenactment of the 'Last Stand'.
Nathaniel Philbrick's complete presentation of his exhaustive research attempts to bring the reader to a clear understanding of the forces involved in this tragedy. He goes far beyond a focus on one or two of those involved. Instead, we are made to realize that the actions of Custer, Sitting Bull and the other personalities involved, were more influenced by the pressures of their time and place than by their own personalities.
Read the rest of this review at: www.civilwarnovels.com/reviews/.
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