Desert Hawk Books |
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Diary of a Union Lady, 1861-1865 Maria
Lydig Daly |
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456
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Rumor, gossip, and innuendo are the weapons of the home front, and no one wielded them with quite the aplomb of Maria Lydig Daly. Her richly detailed comments on everything from inept Union generals to Dorothea Dix's appearance provide the liveliest memoir to emerge from a Northern noncombatant. Daly was the wife of a prominent New York City judge whose connections allowed her to meet many major figures involved in Northern military and diplomatic strategy. Despite catty comments about Mrs. Lincoln and less-than-flattering appraisals of Union generalship, Daly could be sympathetic toward the suffering of the soldiers. She noted the fear with which many viewed the draft, seeing it as a terrible incursion on liberty, but she understood that the times called for severe measures. "Her diary, a notch better than history, is life - a minute, intimate, hilarious self-portrait....She is irritable, querulous, censorious, self-centered, and idle, but not bad-hearted." - New Yorker. "Her comments on fried and foe alike are frequently caustic and often biased, but she emerges from the pages of the diary as a very definite personality." - Library Journal. "An amusing and valuable social document." - Booklist. Jean V. Berlin is coeditor of Sherman's Civil War: Selected Correspondence of William T. Sherman, 1860-1865. |
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