Illustrations and Maps
Preface
Introduction: "My Country, My Honor, My Life": Bravery and Death in
War
Part One: Going to War, 1775-1776
1: "Fear Is Not an American Art": The Coming of the War
3: Choices, 1775
Part Two: The War in the North, 1776-1779
4: "Hastening Fast to a Crisis": June 1775-June 1776
5: Choices, 1776
6: "Knock Him Up for the Campaign": The Battle for New York,
1776
7: "This Hour of Adversity": To the End of 1776
8: Choices, 1777
9: "The Caprice of War": America's Pivotal Victory at Saratoga
10: "We Rallied and Broke": The Campaign for Philadelphia,
September-December 1777
11: Choices, 1778
12: "A Respectable Army": The Grim Year, 1778
13: Choices, 1779
14: "A Band of Brotherhood": The Soldiers, the Army, and the
Forgotten War of 1779
15: "We Have Occasioned a Good Deal of Terror": The War at Sea
16: Choices
Part Three: The War in the South, 1780-1781
17: "A Year Filled With Our Disgraces": Defeat in the South,
1780
18: "Southern Means and Southern Exertions": Hope and Despair,
June-December 1780
19: Choices, 1781
20: "Bloody and Severe": The Pivotal Southern War, Early 1781
21: "We Are Suspended in the Balance": Spring and Summer 1781
Part Four: American Victory, 1781-1783
22: "America is Ours": Victory at Yorktown, 1781
23: Choices, 1782
24: "May We Have Peace in Our Time": Peace and Demobilization,
1782-1783
25: "Little Short of a Miracle": Accounting of America's
Victory
Abbreviations
Notes
Bibliography
Index
John Ferling brings to this book nearly forty years of experience
as a historian of early America. He is the author of nine books and
numerous articles on the American Revolution and early American
wars, and has appeared in four television documentaries devoted to
the Revolution and the War of Independence. His book A Leap in the
Dark won the Fraunces Tavern Book Award as the year's best book on
the American Revolution. He and his wife
live in metropolitan Atlanta.
"Comprehensive and engaging...Grand stuff and sweeping
themes...Ferling is particularly strong in recreating the
relentless misery of the war in Georgia and the Carolinas, an
essential theater that is overlooked in many popular
recountings."--Washington Post Book World
"In his richly detailed battle-by-battle account of the war,
Ferling succeeds where other military histories fail by providing
helpful background for those who don't know their flanks from their
feints. He also brings the military leaders to life, exploring
their backgrounds, their dispositions, their willingness to take
risks."--Christian Science Monitor
"Monographs on the military history of the American Revolution are
beyond count, but Ferling (emer., Univ. of West Georgia) has put
together new and old materials in a compelling way...Upon finishing
the book, readers will understand how true the title is. George
Washington's flaws, the intricacies of congressional relations with
the army and navy, the tactics of guerilla warfare, and the horrors
of the battlefield--all are presented in a readable and
academically sound manner. The vignette and brushstroke fit
together flawlessly. General readers and specialists alike will
applaud this work. Highly recommended."--CHOICE
"John Ferling is a national resource, and Almost a Miracle is a
splendid combination of subject with a superb historian writing at
the peak of his powers. Ferling's brilliant book makes an important
contribution to the scholarship of the Revolution while telling a
gripping story that every American must know."--Michael Beschloss,
author of Presidential Courage: Brave Leaders and How They Changed
America, 1789-1989
"Highly recommended. This very thoughtful book is informed by many
years of teaching on the subject. Its judgments are balanced,
mature, and enlightening."--David Hackett Fischer, author of
Washington's Crossing
"No event in our nation's history is more important than the
Revolution, and no historian has grasped this epic drama better
than John Ferling. This fast paced narrative, anchored in
exhaustive research reminds us that the American victory was never
certain. A fragile, fractious coalition of thirteen weak states
could easily have succumbed to Britain's might had it not been for
the persistent courage and determination of the soldiers and
sailors who fought in
the patriot cause. Ferling is right our triumph was 'almost a
miracle.'"-- William Fowler, Northeastern University and former
Director of the Massachusetts Historical Society
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