Called the greatest Civil War historian, Shelby Foote began his career
as a novelist whose powerful works of fiction rose out of his closeness
to life and culture in his native region, the Mississippi Delta country.
Later in his career he transformed modern historical prose by his keen
sense of the novel. His artistic distance from the elements of
regionalism that lie at the heart both of his novels and of his history
writing gives his prose great narrative force.
This perceptive study fills the genuine need for a sound critical
appreciation of Foote the novelist. After he appeared as a sage
commentator in the PBS series The Civil War, the popular acclaim that
catapulted Shelby Foote the historian to even greater eminence as an
American oracle renewed much deserved interest in his novels and in
critically rich assessments such as this one.