Mr. Dunn Browne's Experiences in the Army, edited by noted Civil War
writer Stephen Sears, provides a candid, often witty, behind-the-scenes
look at the Civil War. A collection of battlefront letters composed by
Browne (pseudonym of Captain Samuel Wheelock Fiske of the 14th
Connecticut Volunteer Infantry), this book is unique in the literature
of the Civil War. Fiske was at once a fighting infantryman and an
experienced newspaper correspondent, and no one in this war, on either
side, wrote better accounts of a soldier's experiences in battle and in
camp. From Antietam to the Wilderness, readers of the Springfield
Republican had Dunn Browne to explain to them just how it was in the
Army of the Potomac. In addition, he was an investigative reporter
(before that term was invented) who delved into the follies of the army
bureaucracy, the sophistries of the Copperheads, and the abuses of
conscription. He delved, too, into the complexities of why men fight.