The Little War Of Private Post: An Artist-Soldier’s Memoir Of The Spanish-American War

Nonfiction, History, Military, Other, United States, Americas, 20th Century
Cover of the book The Little War Of Private Post: An Artist-Soldier’s Memoir Of The Spanish-American War by Charles Johnson Post, Golden Springs Publishing
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Charles Johnson Post ISBN: 9781786256638
Publisher: Golden Springs Publishing Publication: November 6, 2015
Imprint: Golden Springs Publishing Language: English
Author: Charles Johnson Post
ISBN: 9781786256638
Publisher: Golden Springs Publishing
Publication: November 6, 2015
Imprint: Golden Springs Publishing
Language: English

THE LITTLE WAR OF PRIVATE POST is a stirring, funny, brave, sympathetic piece of Americana—the memoir of a foot soldier in the Spanish-American War who happened also to be a first-rate artist, carrying a sketchbook along with his gun. It is a GI’s view of the invasion of Cuba in June 1898, from the moment that Charles Johnson Post passed the jumping test, the coughing test and the eyesight test and became a soldier to the day he returned to New York, gaunt and fever-ridden—the first man back from San Juan Hill.

In April, Private Post was among the raw recruits assembled at Camp Black on Hempstead Plains, Long Island. He is eloquent about the soldier’s diet of coffee, hardtack, and sowbelly, “rancid and translucent in decay”; about the practice drills in close order formation, “much as in the days of Waterloo or Gettysburg”; about his fellow soldiers, their clothing, daily life, and esprit de corps. Post has such a good-humored, straight view of his own and others’ experiences that throughout the book all that is dismal, painful, malarial, hot, deathly and serious becomes touching, brave and ludicrous—though never losing dignity.

The writer’s pen and the artist’s brush re-create for us the invasion of Cuba, one of the most brilliant campaigns of our entire military history—despite fantastic blunders before, during and after it. Rubber ponchos peeled; woolen uniforms were ridiculous in the Cuban heat; horses were so scarce that the Rough Riders had nothing to ride; and after Santiago had capitulated, General Shafter waited and waited while his troops died of disease, far removed from medical care. THE LITTLE WAR OF PRIVATE POST is the chronicle of individual men on a wide canvas. Many of them died, and death gives to the little routines of their lives an epic significance. This was an “old-fashioned” war, but in it we find much that is illuminating today—particularly so because it is on a small, personal scale.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

THE LITTLE WAR OF PRIVATE POST is a stirring, funny, brave, sympathetic piece of Americana—the memoir of a foot soldier in the Spanish-American War who happened also to be a first-rate artist, carrying a sketchbook along with his gun. It is a GI’s view of the invasion of Cuba in June 1898, from the moment that Charles Johnson Post passed the jumping test, the coughing test and the eyesight test and became a soldier to the day he returned to New York, gaunt and fever-ridden—the first man back from San Juan Hill.

In April, Private Post was among the raw recruits assembled at Camp Black on Hempstead Plains, Long Island. He is eloquent about the soldier’s diet of coffee, hardtack, and sowbelly, “rancid and translucent in decay”; about the practice drills in close order formation, “much as in the days of Waterloo or Gettysburg”; about his fellow soldiers, their clothing, daily life, and esprit de corps. Post has such a good-humored, straight view of his own and others’ experiences that throughout the book all that is dismal, painful, malarial, hot, deathly and serious becomes touching, brave and ludicrous—though never losing dignity.

The writer’s pen and the artist’s brush re-create for us the invasion of Cuba, one of the most brilliant campaigns of our entire military history—despite fantastic blunders before, during and after it. Rubber ponchos peeled; woolen uniforms were ridiculous in the Cuban heat; horses were so scarce that the Rough Riders had nothing to ride; and after Santiago had capitulated, General Shafter waited and waited while his troops died of disease, far removed from medical care. THE LITTLE WAR OF PRIVATE POST is the chronicle of individual men on a wide canvas. Many of them died, and death gives to the little routines of their lives an epic significance. This was an “old-fashioned” war, but in it we find much that is illuminating today—particularly so because it is on a small, personal scale.

More books from Golden Springs Publishing

Cover of the book Confederate High Command At Shiloh by Charles Johnson Post
Cover of the book The American War Of Sucession – 1863 [Illustrated Edition] by Charles Johnson Post
Cover of the book The Art Of Speculation by Charles Johnson Post
Cover of the book John Pope - Failure At Second Battle Of Bull Run by Charles Johnson Post
Cover of the book Chancellorsville Staff Ride: Briefing Book [Illustrated Edition] by Charles Johnson Post
Cover of the book Balloons Of The Civil War by Charles Johnson Post
Cover of the book Knight of the Confederacy: Gen. Turner Ashby by Charles Johnson Post
Cover of the book The Civil War and Reconstruction [Second Edition] by Charles Johnson Post
Cover of the book King Oberon’s Forest by Charles Johnson Post
Cover of the book Privateers Of Charleston In The War Of 1812 by Charles Johnson Post
Cover of the book Money Mountain by Charles Johnson Post
Cover of the book The Confederate Command During The Fort Henry-Fort Donelson Campaign, February 1862 by Charles Johnson Post
Cover of the book General Stand Watie’s Confederate Indians by Charles Johnson Post
Cover of the book The Overland Campaign, 4 May-15 June 1864 [Illustrated Edition] by Charles Johnson Post
Cover of the book CENTENNIAL TALE; Memoirs Of Colonel “Chester” S. Bassett French by Charles Johnson Post
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy