cover image Men of Fire: Grant, Forrest and the Campaign That Decided the Civil War

Men of Fire: Grant, Forrest and the Campaign That Decided the Civil War

Jack Hurst, . . Basic, $27.50 (442pp) ISBN 978-0-465-03184-9

The bloody February 1862 Union victory at Fort Donelson on Tennessee’s Cumberland River is remembered as the Union’s first big success—and as the battle in which Ulysses S. Grant held firm for Confederate unconditional surrender. Former journalist Hurst (Nathan Bedford Forrest: A Biography ) attempts to make the case that Grant’s western theater victory at Donelson indelibly shaped his military career, as well as that of Confederate Lt. Col. Nathan Bedford Forrest, and that the battle turned the tide of the Civil War unalterably in the North’s favor. Writing forcefully and engagingly, Hurst does a thorough job of reconstructing the military aspects of the battle and never shies away from illuminating the war’s horror. His focus is on Grant, the Confederate generals who faced him (John Floyd, Gideon Pillow, Simon Buckner and Bushrod Johnson) and the ever-aggressive Forrest, best known for his battlefield viciousness and his postwar role in creating the Ku Klux Klan. It’s a stretch, though, to postulate that the 1862 victory at Donelson propelled the Union to victory more than three years later. Certainly, as Hurst says, western theater action often is overlooked in assessing the Civil War. But one can’t ignore the impact on the war’s outcome of the massive battles of Antietam, Gettysburg, Wilderness and Cold Harbor that came after Donelson. (Aug.)