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FOR RELEASE: Monday, June 11, 2007
A Compelling Look into the Eyes of War
Photographic history of Tennessee in the Civil War published by the University of Arkansas Press.

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| Portraits of Conflict |
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. - It's one thing
to understand that more than 20,000 Confederate and Union soldiers died at the
Battle of Murfreesboro. It's quite another to study an ambrotype portrait of
20-year-old private Frank B. Crosthwait, dressed in his Sunday best, looking
somberly at the camera. In a tragically short time, he'll be found on the
battlefield, mortally wounded, still clutching the knotted pieces of
handkerchief he used in a hopeless attempt to stop the bleeding from his
injuries.
Private Crosthwait's image is
one of more than 250 portraits - many never before published - to be found in
the highly anticipated Portraits of Conflict: A Photographic History of
Tennessee in the Civil War (hardback, $59.95), by Richard B.
McCaslin, just published by the University of Arkansas Press. The eighth
in the distinguished Portraits of Conflict series now joins previous volumes on
South Carolina, North Carolina, Georgia, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas and
Arkansas. This volume merges the personal and the public to provide a uniquely
rich portrayal of Tennesseans - in uniforms both blue and gray - who fought and
lost their lives in the Civil War.
Here is the story of a widow
working as a Union spy to support herself and her children. Of a father
emerging from his house to find his Confederate soldier son dying at his feet.
Of a nine-year-old boy who attached himself to a Union regiment after his
mother died. Their stories and faces, joined with personal remembrances from
recovered letters and diaries and ample historical information on secession, famous
battles, surrender and Reconstruction, make this new Portraits of Conflict
a Civil War treasure.
Richard B. McCaslin is an
associate professor of history at the University of North Texas. He is the
author of Lee in the Shadow of Washington; Tainted Breeze: The Great
Hanging at Gainesville, Texas;
and the South Carolina and North Carolina volumes in the Portraits of Conflict
series. The series, edited by Carl Moneyhon and Bobby Roberts,
has received much praise. The Journal of Southern History called the
books "major contributions to Civil War history" and The Civil War News
wrote that they were "destined to become collector's items."
Previous volumes have
received awards from the Chicago Book Clinic, the American Association for
State and Local History, the Arkansas Library Association, and the American
Association of University Presses.
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Contact:
Thomas Lavoie, director of
marketing & sales University of Arkansas Press (479) 575-6657, tlavoie@uark.edu
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