A vital addition to Civil War collections.--Library Journal
A wide-ranging and fascinating study. . . . Reminds us of the haunting effects war can (and does) have on its participants long after the fighting ends.--Lesley J. Gordon, Civil War Monitor
White's prodigious research, conveyed in clear, coherent prose, spotlights an underutilized resource for historians and enthusiasts to use in understanding the personal impact of the war and its effect on postwar lives.--America's Civil War
White offers a detailed tapestry in seven chapters that emphasize soldiers' sleep deprivation, dream lives that tapped the rank and file's sexual anxieties and fear of battle, the dreams of home folk and of slaves and former slaves, the abundance of dreams prophesying death, dream images and illustrations in the print world, and the cultural hypertext that arose in the wake of Abraham Lincoln's presentiments about his own mortality.--American Historical Review
A wonderful window into the inner lives of Americans--soldier and civilian, white and black, men and women--during the Civil War Era.--Journal of the Civil War Era
White is in the vanguard of young historians whose work brings a different, but vitally significant view of activities and events surrounding the Civil War.--Daily Press
The quoted letters create a sense of intimacy with wartime lives that is eerie and intense, at times rivaling the highest achievements of art.--Pacific Standard
Midnight in America is a clear-sighted testament to the ways in which soldiers and loved ones at home alike willed themselves to "visit" in dreams, saw prophetic possibilities, and generally coped with psychological trauma.--The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society
Fascinating. . . . Shows that many command decisions historians have viewed as errors were made by men who had not slept in long days."--Times Literary Supplement
Midnight in America takes a unique look at a rather pedestrian part of human existence--sleep and dreams--and how the experience of war and separation from loved ones often revealed underlying anxieties, fears, and hopes through individual dreams. Mining an astonishing amount of primary source material, White brings us closer . . . to the common soldier, often right into the private exchanges between spouses sharing their most tender dreams of the other."--The History Shelf