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Gone for Soldiers : A Novel of the Mexican War
Gone for Soldiers A Novel of the Mexican War
Author: Jeffrey Shaara
With his acclaimed New York Times bestsellers Gods and Generals and The Last Full Measure, Jeff Shaara expanded upon his father's Pulitzer Prize-winning Civil War classic, The Killer Angels--ushering the reader through the poignant drama of this most bloody chapter in our history. Now, in Gone for Soldiers, Jeff Shaara carries us back fifteen ye...  more »
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ISBN-13: 9780345427502
ISBN-10: 0345427505
Publication Date: 5/2/2000
Pages: 448
Rating:
  • Currently 4.3/5 Stars.
 8

4.3 stars, based on 8 ratings
Publisher: Ballantine Books
Book Type: Hardcover
Other Versions: Paperback
Members Wishing: 1
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review
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tschaap avatar reviewed Gone for Soldiers : A Novel of the Mexican War on + 2 more book reviews
Great story! I was not familiar with the Mexican War in such detail before. As with all of Jeff Shaara's books, he makes reading history very interesting!
Fishtrap avatar reviewed Gone for Soldiers : A Novel of the Mexican War on + 4 more book reviews
If you like Jeff Shaara don't miss reading this one which is an excellent narrative history of an unknown war told only as Jeff can tell it in his very readable style.
reviewed Gone for Soldiers : A Novel of the Mexican War on + 179 more book reviews
The veteran major-general Winfield Scott and an upstart Robert E. Lee anchor Gone for Soldiers. Headstrong, brilliant, and generally distrustful of his less able subordinates, Scott leads the U.S. troops slowly and inevitably toward Mexico City, imparting martial lessons along the way. "The worst consequence of fighting a war is not if you lose, Mr. Lee," he sighs. "The worst thing you can do is win badly." Lee distinguishes himself throughout the campaign, his meticulous scouting and shrewd inferences winning both Scott's admiration and the jealousy of officers whose ambition surpasses their experience. Lee, too, frequently assesses his place in the hierarchy, but he--like Scott--remains more bemused than seduced by the glitter of fame.

This sympathy between the two men grows as Lee observes Scott embroiled in the distracting politics of war: officers salivating for promotion, enemies more preoccupied with saving face than lives, distant legislators issuing directives. If Gone for Soldiers occasionally bogs down during its many lengthy battle scenes, unexpected and delightful small touches arise nearly as often--the "capture" of Mexican leader Santa Anna's wooden leg or the chance encounter between Lee and a young Ulysses S. Grant. Duty-bound and humble, Lee cultivates a perpetual stoicism. "Now we're out here in some place God may not want us to be. It's hard to believe He is happy watching us fight a war," he muses, a sobering coda to the grim calculations of victory.
FoundItOnAnAirplane avatar reviewed Gone for Soldiers : A Novel of the Mexican War on + 30 more book reviews
I've read excerpts from this and other Shaara works (by both the father & the son). Outstanding works but so descriptive that I had trouble following the scenes as they changed from one story to another. One must really have an eye for detail and already be very familiar w/ Civil War commanders, the Mexican War, and the history of the period.


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