With To Make Men Free (originally published as The Battle of the Crater), New York Times bestselling authors Newt Gingrich and William R. Forstchen take readers to the center of a nearly forgotten Civil War confrontation, a battle that was filled with controversy and misinterpretation even before the attack began.�� June 1864: the Civil War is now into its fourth year of bloody conflict with no end in sight.� James O'Reilly��amed artist, correspondent, and former companion of Lincoln��s summoned discreetly to a meeting with the President.� His old friend gives him a difficult assignment: travel to the trenches outside of Richmond to be Lincoln's eyes and ears amongst the men, sending back an honest account of the front.
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Meanwhile, General Ambrose Burnside, a hard luck commander out of favor with his superiors, has an ingenious plan to break through the�closest point on the Confederate line by tunneling forward from the Union position beneath the fort to explode its defenses. The risks are high, and Burnside needs a brave division of the United States Colored Troops for one desperate rush that just might bring victory.� As the battleground drama unfolds, this must-read work rewrites our understanding of one of the great battles of the war, providing a sharp, rousing and harshly realistic view of politics and combat during the darkest year of the Civil War.
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Praise for the works of Newt Gingrich and William R. Forstchen�
��asterful storytelling.��--William E. Butterworth IV, New York Times bestselling author of The Saboteurs
��ompelling narrative force and meticulous detail.��--The Atlanta Journal Constitution