General Lee: A Biography of Robert E. Lee
General Lee: A Biography of Robert E. Lee book cover

General Lee: A Biography of Robert E. Lee

Paperback – August 22, 1994

Price
$24.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
489
Publisher
Da Capo Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0306805899
Dimensions
8.45 x 5.39 x 0.99 inches
Weight
1.08 pounds

Description

This book admits readers into the mind of the South's greatest hero and permits them to relive the immense achievements his military genius won against enormous odds. Fitzhugh Lee was the nephew of Robert E. Lee, and a commander in Lee's army.

Features & Highlights

  • "A worthy addition to any collection of books on R. E. Lee and the Army of Northern Virginia."--Gary W. Gallagher
  • Soldier, politician, and author, General Fitzhugh Lee (1835-1905) had earlier attended West Point as a cadet and proved to be a boisterous challenge to the superintendent of the Academy, who was also his uncle: Robert E. Lee. Fitzhugh developed an abiding affection and respect for Lee, culminating in the nephew's brilliant service to the Confederate cause. On his part, Lee commended Fitzhugh as "an excellent cavalry officer. . . . I feel at liberty to call upon him-on all occasions." It was Fitzhugh who discovered how vulnerable Joseph Hooker's right was and thus enabled Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson to plan the war's most famous flanking movement at the battle of Chancellorsville. Later, Fitzhugh's cavalry covered the final retreat of Lee's exhausted army to Appomattox.After the war, his close relationship with his uncle continued, finding its best expression in Fitzhugh's biography,
  • General Lee,
  • which is valuable both as a passionate portrait of the celebrated general and as a historical document. Fitzhugh enjoyed the great advantage of access to Lee's unpublished private papers and used them generously, so that the strongest voice the reader encounters is not the author's, but his subject's. The book covers Lee's early service in the Mexican War through his masterful command during the Seven Days Battle and later at Second Manassas, Sharpsburg Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, and Gettysburg, up to his surrender and last years.
  • General Lee
  • admits readers into the mind of the South's greatest hero and permits them to relive the immense achievements his military genius won against enormous odds.
  • With an introduction by Gary W. Gallagher

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(180)
★★★★
25%
(150)
★★★
15%
(90)
★★
7%
(42)
23%
(139)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Not quite a biography, but...

I am a student of the civil war, and I've made most of my studies from Actual Memoirs of the event. I figured that I'd rather take the word of the people who were actually there than 3rd person commentary. I've read Grant, Sheridan, J.B. Gordon, E.P. Alexander, and of course, Sam Watkins, Frank Wilkeson, and Berry Benson, to name some of the best. Regrettably, Robert Lee died before he could record his own personal reminiscences. Through my desire to read about him in the same way I'd read about other participants of the war, I found this book-and I figured that Fitzhugh Lee's biography would be as near as I could get to the famed General, for Fitzhugh Lee was not only a Relative of the famed General's, but a General himself in the War of the Rebellion. Half way through the book, I felt thoroughly betrayed. After the first 70 pages, the book becomes the most average of monologues about the movements of troops during the civil war. The only difference between this book and the memoirs of certain other officers engaged in the same battles is the Fitzhugh Starts his recitations with, "General Lee's Order were that...", and has less maps, that usually ease the strain of describing obscure movements.
I will say, though, that the author does spend at least a quarter of the book On the life of R.E. Lee outside of the civil war- the first 70 pages focusing on his Lineage, his training at West point, and his engagements in Mexico, and the Last 20 on his Presidency at Washington-Lee College. Also, sparsely placed throughout the book, Fitzhugh makes use of General Lee's personal correspondance with his wife and family. I would have appreciated seeing more of that, but people 150 years late to the party can't be choosers. Of the Author's style, it is mostly factual, highly romantic(though nothing like Gordon's memoir), and at times he makes allusions and references that let you know he's highly intelligent. This Book doesn't make any in-depth study of General Lee, and mostly considers his character to be untouchable....
42 people found this helpful
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Of interest to fans of Robert E Lee

from the prospective that it does include personal letters from Lee. The recounting of the campaigns is prefunctory though Fitzhugh does come down heavily on Longstreet and eagerly takes up the cudgel for the Gettysburg-wasn't-Lee's-fault crowd.
9 people found this helpful
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A good book

I enjoyed this book. It's very informative and accurate if you look at several viewpoints and different facts about the civil war. Fitzhugh Lee is a good writer and starts the book by examining Robert E. Lee's bloodline.

The book strays from a biography during the sections in the book where Fitzhugh Lee explains in great detail the major movements and battles of R.E. Lee. He at times takes the opportunity to describe personal facts about Lee's subordinates (ie Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson) during the book. Following his descriptions of the battles (ie Chancellorsville) can be a bit confusing and may require the reader to use another source in examining the specific battles Fitzhugh Lee describes.

Besides all this, I think this book is very intriguing. A history buff or anyone interested in General Lee would enjoy this.
2 people found this helpful