The Kent State University Press - 307 Lowry Hall - Kent, Ohio - 44242
Featured books button Search our catalog button Browse by title button Browse by author button Browse by subject button How to order button
Home button
About Us button
Events button
Books button
Series button
Poetry button
Journals button
Links button
Contact Us button
Shopping Cart button
Warren cover image

Scars to Prove It

The Civil War Soldier and American Fiction

Craig A. Warren

2009, 224 pp
Paper ISBN 978-1-60635-015-7
Add to cart

Paper, $34.95

courtesy of our partner, Atlas Books
Call (419) 281-1802 to order by phone.



History as fiction’s muse

“When the first cannon sounded over Charleston Harbor in 1861, it announced the beginning of an American literary phenomenon. Readers North and South hungered for imaginative writing about the escalating war, and canny publishers were swift to deliver. . . . Today even the most conservative estimate would place the total number of Civil War novels at well over one thousand, and this figure does not account for the thousands of war-related stories published in journals, newspapers, and magazines since 1861.”—from the Introduction

This examination of the interaction between fictional representations of the Civil War and the memoirs and autobiographies of Civil War soldiers argues that veterans’ accounts taught later generations to represent the conflict in terms of individual experiences, revealing how national identity developed according to written records of the past.

Author Craig A. Warren explores seven popular novels about the Civil War—The Red Badge of Courage, Gone with the Wind, None Shall Look Back, The Judas Field, The Unvanquished, The Killer Angels, and Absalom, Absalom! His study reveals that the war owes much of its cultural power to a large but overlooked genre of writing: postwar memoirs, regimental histories, and other narratives authored by Union and Confederate veterans. Warren contends that literary scholars and historians took seriously the influence that veterans’ narratives had on the shape and character of Civil War fiction.

Scars to Prove It fills a gap in the study of Civil War literature and will appeal to those interested in the literature, military writing, and literary studies related to the Civil War.

Craig A. Warren is assistant professor of English at Penn State Erie, The Behrend College.


Browse other Civil War titles


Link to Kent State's Home Page