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Landscape Turned Red
- The Battle of Antietam
- Narrated by: Barrett Whitener
- Length: 14 hrs and 31 mins
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Publisher's Summary
Critic Reviews
"The best account of the Battle of Antietam." (The New York Times Book Review)
"No other book so vividly depicts that battle, the campaign that preceded it, and the dramatic political events that followed." (Washington Post Book World)
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What listeners say about Landscape Turned Red
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
- David
- 08-16-06
Excellent Book
I have read Sears' Gettysburg book and wanted to try another - and was not disappointed. I have read various books as to the battle of Antietam but this is the most comprehensive. Sears has a nice way of providing some background information and detailing events leading up to the battle. Then the details of the ultimate battle make it seem as if you were in the middle of it.
I recommend this for a wide varitey of audiences.
9 people found this helpful
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- Are you kidding me?
- 08-31-19
Editor?
I have to wonder IF the editor knew anything about the battle or even listened to this recording. The famous Confederate General Harry Heth, one of the main subject personalities of day one of a three battle (properly pronounced HEATH, not as it's spelled. The word edible isn't pronounced eat-able either. It's just annoying is all. It would help if the editor knew a little about the subject matter. How does one go about getting these jobs?
5 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Charles
- 10-18-08
Best Coverage of America's Bloodiest Day
Great book! Sears is knowledgable and fair, but it is really his ability to create an interesting narritive of an event most readers are already largely familiar with that makes "Landscape Turned Red" work so well. In large measure Sears succeeds, because he weaves in interesting quotations from such a wide variety of sources without distracting the story. He quotes Lee and McClellan, but also from unknown officers and men on both sides. Great work!
4 people found this helpful
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- Ron
- 10-20-10
Captivating
This superbly written, well narrated book brings clarity to exactly why this battle was the bloodiest in American history. Having an ancestor that died from wounds received during the fighting at the corn field near the 'Dunker Church'; the telling of the tale enabled me to visualize what the battle must have been like for these brave men on both sides. Excellent!
2 people found this helpful
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- oboy
- 08-11-07
Landscape Turned Red
One of the best accounts of the Battle of Antietam that I've ever read. The book is amazingly detailed. It's clear that an incredible amount of research went into the writing of this book, including the most detailed account of the Battle of South Mountain I have yet read. A must read for any true Civil War Buff who is interested in the who,what,when and why of a battle
2 people found this helpful
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- Rick
- 06-23-13
It's been on my shelf for 25 years!
I've owned this book for some time having acquired it many, many years ago. Not being a fan of the Army of the Potomac, I was never compelled to read it until now. I was not disappointed! Written in the early 80's, this is a classic. The unit detail and for both the North and the South is excellent and the quotes form the combatants adds to the flavor of this read. "Little Mac" was a horrible commander! and this book outlines why. I look forward to listening again...Maybe this September 17th!
4 people found this helpful
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- Joseph Carlton
- 07-18-21
An in-depth account of the Battle of Antietam
Steven Sears does an outstanding job of telling the many details of the horrible battle. I have been able to find very little surprisingly so on this battle and this is the first thorough account that I have read of it. Steven Sears how's the many different sides of the story from George McClellan, to Robert E Lee, to General Burnside, General Longstreet and the remarkable soldiers that were the ones doing the fighting. The many different stories are confusing and enlightening at the same time much as the battle itself was. He also captures the political background of what was happening leading up to this battle and following it.
1 person found this helpful
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- KrisS
- 05-24-21
Informative
I listened to this book as preparation for a visit to the battlefield. I think its important to understand the backstory, otherwise you're just looking at an empty field. It sure was peaceful when I was there. Driving down the Sunken Road, and viewing Burnside's bridge, I thought of the thousands who lost their lives.
1 person found this helpful
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- Bruce & Katilda
- 04-18-22
Excellent work
The detail and research in this work is exhaustive yet not exhausting. Antietam is a complex battle with many moving parts and actors, yet Sears brings it all together very nicely. He manages to bring the actions and thoughts of both commanders which gives a clear view of the battle. Whiteners narration is excellent. I'm anxious to read-hear other words by Sears.
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- SFC Raptor82Abn
- 10-29-21
A detailed accounting
An unbiased work of America's Bloodest Single Day of Combat. Mr Sears, thank you.
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- timb
- 02-12-20
Masterly account
Sears weaves a compelling narrative from the complex and potentially confusing events of the day and his words are beautifully read by the narrator. Having just read the same author’s equally absorbing account of Gettysburg I hope that the publishers will consider an audio version of that too.