"Lincoln would have liked this brilliant book. It lights a path through history to his great goal: an America united by understanding and forgiveness."--Charles Bracelen Flood, author of 1864: Lincoln at the Gates of History
"For a different take on the Civil War...Thomas Fleming is a delightful and provocative historian."--Washington Times
"A sweeping work"--Civil War Book Review
Kirkus Reviews, March 2013
"[A] thesis-driven tour."
Booklist, 4/1
"The prolific Fleming, for decades a fixture among American historians, pinpoints public opinion as the proximate origin of the war...Making a plausible presentation of antebellum attitudes and illusions, Fleming is sure to spark lively discussion about the Civil War."
Publishers Weekly, 3/18
"[Fleming is] always a quirky, contrarian writer-historian."
What Would the Founders Think?, 4/10/13
"An interesting and readable book. In the course of Fleming's narrative he casts light on some little discussed related events."
Philadelphia Tribune, 5/23/13
"Makes a convincing case that the polarization that divided the North and South and led to the Civil War began decades earlier than most historians are willing to admit...A Disease in the Public Mind is an attempt to offer understanding and forgiveness for both sides of a war the continues to challenge the country's founding principles of liberty and equality."
Garden Grove Journal, 5/23/13
"[Fleming's] research is excellent...This book presents an interesting perspective on the Civil War and its causes that is a clear departure from most of the literature on that subject."
Huffington Post, 8/27/2013
"With myth destroying zeal and careful research Fleming contends that a fanatical sense of moral superiority on the part of the abolitionists, an irrational fear of a race war by Southerners abetted by sinister political posturing, and a deeply biased media were the prime motivating factors in a war that by far surpassed the casualties of all wars combined since America was founded...Fleming delves deeply into the hate and alarm engendered by both sides."
Wall Street Journal, 5/25/13
"A great deal of fine scholarship...Mr. Fleming more than supports his arguments...Well-researched and well-written...[A] superbly revisionist book."
American History, August 2013
"Thoughtful and provocative...The prewar arc of divisive national self-destruction he describes looks eerily, unhappily familiar today."
Library Journal, 5/1/13
"Controversial."