The Wizard of the Saddle
Nathan Bedford Forrest
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Jeffrey Smith
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
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Smith does a solid job covering Nathan Bedford Forrest’s rise from private to lieutenant general, with heavy emphasis on dates, battle formations, troop movements, and outcomes. For readers interested in Forrest strictly as a cavalry commander, the book delivers a clear and organized overview of why he was considered tactically gifted, as well as how his aggressiveness and instinct for speed and surprise shaped his reputation on the battlefield.
The opening and closing sections do an adequate job outlining Forrest’s life before and after the war, offering a useful — if brief — glimpse into the man outside of uniform. His personality, particularly his volatile temper and forceful presence, is touched on enough to give the reader a sense of who he was, though these elements remain secondary to the military material.
Where the book struggled for me was in terms of engagement. While I appreciated the new information and the structured look at Forrest’s campaigns, the reading experience leaned far more toward study material than narrative history. It’s dense, analytical, and at times dry — rewarding from a learning standpoint, but not especially entertaining. There are moments of interest throughout, but they’re buried within a format that feels designed more for reference than immersion.
That said, the book succeeds at what it sets out to do. I wouldn’t reread it, but I would recommend it to readers looking for an early or introductory look at Forrest’s military career, particularly those interested in Civil War cavalry operations or tactical development.
Informative, efficient, and focused — just not a book meant to captivate so much as to educate
Wizard of The Saddle.
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