"Offers a stimulating look into Civil War memory's evolution and insight into the reverberations that continue to the present."--H-Net Reviews
"In this brisk, engagingly written book, Silber charts the way that disparate Americans used the Civil War to frame important engagements with contemporary issues, especially with federal power, during the depression. Silber's chapters include analyses of artists, writers, filmmakers, government officials, monument builders, trade unionists, and scores of others, both black and white."--The Annals of Iowa
"Silber moves seamlessly from political memory to cultural memory, and the cultural memory she discusses spans a wide gamut of film and literature. . . . A necessary addition to the historiographies of both the Great Depression and memory writ large."--Journal of Southern History
"A fascinating exploration of 'how Americans used a troubled past, ' not just the Civil War but also slavery and Reconstruction, 'to navigate a complicated present, ' the Great Depression and World War II. . . . With thoughtful appreciation of conflicting views . . . It proves particularly wise in stressing how contemporary concerns shape historical memory more than historical memory shapes contemporary behavior."--Journal of the Civil War Era
"Nina Silber has made an impressive contribution to the essential historical understanding of how the past influences the present and how the memory of past events, specifically the Civil War, resonated in New Deal America."--Maryland Historical Magazine
"An alluring read that effectively illuminates the New Deal era as crossroads of popular Civil War interpretation. Silber demonstrates the relationship between collective memory and social power. Federal administrators, National Park supervisors, propagandists, reactionaries, activists, and filmmakers navigated a dynamic social, cultural, and economic landscape in order to construct a 'useable past' to make sense of or effect change in the present."--Journal of Arizona History
"Silber's account of how, as Faulkner said, the past isn't even past, is accessible and well written. Anyone interested in the uses of memory by Americans to serve multiple and often contradictory causes will benefit from This War Ain't Over."--The Journal of Southern Religion