An eloquent elegy to the "Boys in Blue." . . . Sensitively written and impeccably researched. . . . Will stand as an important contribution to the history of the American veteran.--Allegra di Bonaventura, author of For Adam's Sake: A Family Saga in Colonial New England
Framed as a Homeric odyssey, Jordan's tale of the Union soldier combines unflinching honesty with generous humanity.--James Oakes, author of Freedom National: The Destruction of Slavery in the United States, 1861 - 1865
A rich trove of journals, letters and published accounts reveal[s] the enormous toll that the Civil War took on its participants. . . . Books like [Marching Home] contribute to a much broader cultural narrative.--Randall Fuller "Wall Street Journal"
A far darker narrative of veterans profoundly and permanently alienated from a civilian public that neither understood nor properly acknowledged their wartime sacrifice. . . . Powerful.--Gary W. Gallagher "Washington Post"
Readers . . . will come away with a deeper appreciation of the sacrifices soldiers make; many living veterans will thank Jordan for his attention to an often neglected but important aspect of U.S. military history.--Walter Russell Mead "Foreign Affairs"
Yet another cautionary tale from the Civil War--that the pain of war endures long after the stacking of arms or the signing of an armistice. A fact that those who clamor for U.S. military intervention in every conflict too often forget.--Frank Reeves "Pittsburgh Post-Gazette"
A somber portrait of the reality of Union veterans' postwar lives. . . . Theirs is a story that had to be told, and Brian Matthew Jordan tells it very well. The research is impeccable, and the writing finely crafted. . . . Highly recommended.--Jeffry D. Wert "Civil War News"