Show me a hero and I will write you a tragedy, said F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Perhaps no event in American history better illustrates this view than
the Civil War and its principal players in the years after the conflict.
The value of military glory and ties to greatness would turn toward the
tragic even among the victors--like earthquake survivors stumbling into
another world, simply trying to make a new life. Their struggle would be
a constant tug back toward a destroyed past, and a confrontation with
the reality of being strangers in their own land. David Hardin's stories
of eleven such figures are revealing and touching: the explosive romance
between Jefferson Davis's daughter and the grandson of a Yankee
abolitionist; the struggle between the irreligious William T. Sherman
and his devout Catholic wife for the soul of their unstable son; the
bankrupt Ulysses Grant's heroic race to complete his memoirs and provide
for his family while dying of cancer. These are among the stories and
people in After the War, which also includes the Southern diarist Mary
Chesnut, the luckless Confederate John Bell Hood, the sometimes Klan
leader Nathan Bedford Forrest, the shopaholic Mary Lincoln, the
gentlemanly Joe Johnston, the mythological Robert E. Lee, the
underappreciated Union general George Thomas, and the plucky Libbie
Custer, who defended her husband best known for his reckless disaster.
Whether Northerner or Southerner, their lives did not end at Appomattox.
Their dissimilar outcomes are a feast of irony and, collectively, a
portrait of national change. With eleven black-and-white photographs.