A powerful new volume of missives about combat by Alexander Hamilton,
General Sherman, Evelyn Waugh, Kurt Vonnegut, and more, from the author
of the bestselling Letters of Note collections
Defeated Cossacks taunt the pompous sultan of the Ottoman Empire. A
black corporal beseeches Abraham Lincoln to ensure that his regiment
receives proper payment for performing their duties. Mohandas Gandhi
urges Adolf Hitler to turn back the tide of war. A suicide bomber in
Iraq explains his simple motivation to his family. This poignant
collection offers a nuanced and moving look at the act of armed
conflict. Each of these 30 remarkable letters sheds light on what it
means for us to take up arms against one another and record a piece of
that terrible deed. They encapsulate the full experience of battle, from
feats of courage and sacrifice to the grief that follows acts of
violence, ultimately affirming the power of the written word.