Jesse James: Last Rebel of The Civil War by T. J. Stiles

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: October 2003
  • 544pp
  • Sales Rank: 18,173
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: October 2003
    • Publisher: Random House Inc
    • Format: Paperback, 544pp
    • Sales Rank: 18,173

    Synopsis

    Stiles has had articles and essays about American history published in the Smithsonian magazine, the Los Angeles Times and the Denver Post. A native of Minnesota, he lives in Northfield, site of the annihilation of the James-Younger gang in 1876. Stiles' detailed, academic text reveals much about Jesse James and his associates and the period of American history in which they lived. The book includes 16 pages of photographs and six maps. Annotation c. Book News, Inc.,Portland, OR

    The New Yorker

    Jesse Woodson James was America's most romanticized bandit, celebrated as a kind of avenging Robin Hood. But, in a thorough examination of his life and times, Stiles argues that James more closely resembled a young man with a merciless itch for excitement and easy money. Stiles is particularly good at re-creating murderous, anarchic Missouri society during the Civil War and Reconstruction, when James, who was born in 1847, came of age; the author's accounts of the bushwhacker raids led by the guerrilla fighters William Clarke Quantrill and "Bloody Bill" Anderson are harrowing. Through massacres, train robberies, and a futile pursuit by Pinkerton detectives, James himself remains a distant figure -- an outlaw, a charmer, and, above all, perhaps, an intelligent and very modern self-promoter and fame-seeker. He is not nearly so interesting as his implacable mother, Zerelda, or his brother Frank, a reader of Shakespeare, who lived into the twentieth century, took part in Wild West shows, and deserves a biography of his own.

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    Biography

    A native of rural Benton County, Minnesota, T.J. Stiles studied history at Carleton College and Columbia University, where he received two graduate degrees. His writings about American history include articles in Smithsonian, essays in the Los Angeles Times and the Denver Post, and a five-volume series of primary-source anthologies. He lives in New York. For more information on T. J. Stiles and Jesse James see www.tjstiles.com.

    Customer Reviews

    Jesse James: Last Rebel of the Civil Warby Lilo02

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    October 23, 2008: The one thing that usually comes to mind when the name Jesse James comes up is; ruthless outlaw who murdered and robbed banks out of shere boardom. We dont really like to see him as someone who was truely a troubled person to begin w/ but one who did the kinds of things that he did in his lifetime as a way of protest through terror. When we think of Jesse James we don't think of him as someone who was on the same ranks w/ Osama Bin Ladin back in his day. For Jesse James, the Civil War never ended. If he were to be still alive today he would continue to fight his Civil War by useing terrorist tactics. You get a very different perspective of the South that Jesse James was born in through this book. Lots of history.

    I Also Recommend: Billy the Kid, Doc Holliday, Wyatt Earp.

    Historically Accurateby Anonymous

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    August 12, 2008: TJ Stiles did a wonderful job researching this biography. This book depicts what James' life was like growing up in Missouri during the Civil War and what made him the man he was. It is a history lesson on the real Jesse James, not the glorified version. Highly Recommended


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