Victor David Hanson, author of the highly regarded classic The Western
Way of War, presents an audacious and controversial theory of what
contributes to the success of military campaigns.
Examining in riveting detail the campaigns of three brilliant generals
who led largely untrained forces to victory over tyrannical enemies,
Hanson shows how the moral confidence with which these generals imbued
their troops may have been as significant as any military strategy they
utilized. Theban general Epaminondas marched an army of farmers two
hundred miles to defeat their Spartan overlords and forever change the
complexion of Ancient Greece. William Tecumseh Sherman led his motley
army across the South, ravaging the landscape and demoralizing the
citizens in the defense of right. And George S. Patton commanded the
recently formed Third Army against the German forces in the West, nearly
completing the task before his superiors called a halt. Intelligent and
dramatic, The Soul of Battle is narrative history at it's best and
a work of great moral conviction.