
"Richardson tells a different story about the United States as a whole during a reconceptualized period of 'Reconstruction' after the Civil War."--Sheldon Hackney, University of Pennsylvania
"With a marvelous sense of scope, narrative lucidity, and thorough research, Heather Richardson makes the convincing case that Americans still live in the world that Reconstruction built--or left partly unbuilt. A skilled historian of political economy, Richardson has here written a new and important synthesis of late-nineteenth-century American society enmeshed in a great struggle to determine just what kind of country the Civil War had wrought. This book is deeply informed and a good read; it spurs our effort to help Americans realize that their reading must not stop with Appomattox."--David W. Blight, Yale University, author of Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory
"A truly fresh reconsideration--and a smart and wonderfully written one--of Reconstruction. Richardson pulls back to a genuinely national perspective, and in doing so gives us a strikingly original view of this vitally important time in the national story."--Elliott West, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville