Историческая литература

Различные книги в жанре Историческая литература

Muhammad the Prophet

Maulana Muhammad Ali

Researched biography of the Holy Prophet. Corrects misconceptions about his life; answers western criticism.<br><br>&quot;(1) Muhammad The Prophet (2) The Early Caliphate, by Muhammad Ali, together constitute the most complete and satisfactory history of the early Muslims hitherto compiled in English&quot; &mdash; Islamic Culture, Hyderabad, India<br><br>&quot; … He has now produced a biography of the Prophet of Islam in English … It is not only Muslims who should feel grateful to him for the publication. The book should, indeed, give greater gratification to the English-speaking non-Muslims, whom it gives an opportunity of knowing the truth about the life and personality of one who is admitted on all hands to be the greatest reformer in the history of the world.&quot; &mdash; The New Orient<br><br>&quot;…it is written in an authoritative and interesting fashion, and from a historical point of view will be well worth perusing by adherents of religions other than Islam.&quot; &mdash; The Civil and Military Gazette, Lahore, Pakistan

The Lost Rocks: The Dare Stones and the Unsolved Mystery of Sir Walter Raleigh's Lost Colony

David La Vere

What if the 1587 Lost Colony of Roanoke was not lost? What if the survivors left Roanoke Island, North Carolina and found their way to Georgia? That is the scenario scholars contemplated when a series of engraved stones were found in the 1930&#39;s. The first, found near the Chowan River in North Carolina, claimed that Eleanor Dare and a few other settlers had made their way inland after an Indian attack wiped out the rest of the colony. Among the dead were Eleanor&#39;s daughter, Virginia Dare, the first English child born in North America, and Eleanor&#39;s husband Ananias. The remaining Dare Stones, more than forty in number, told a fantastic tale of how Eleanor and the survivors made their way overland, first to South Carolina, and then to Georgia. If true, North Carolina stood to lose one of its most cherished historical legends. Author David La Vere weaves the story of the Dare Stones with that of the Lost Colony of Roanoke in a tale that will fire your imagination and give you pause at the same time. In this true story that shook the world during the 1930s and early 1940s, the question on everyone&#39;s mind was: Had the greatest American mystery &ndash; the Lost Colony &ndash; finally been solved?

The Court-Martial of General John Pope

Steven Ph.D. Condon

This book, which takes a bold new look at the Second Manassas Campaign, is full of surprises, including a mistaken mountain, a warning that never was, and Pope&#39;s real plan for entrapping Stonewall Jackson. It contains an amazing Union supporting cast that includes a train-stealing renegade general, another general who was sent to reinforce Pope but who nevertheless sought to abandon him on the eve of battle, and another Union general who gloated over what he foresaw as Pope&#39;s imminent battlefield defeat and then not surprisingly repeatedly delayed the forwarding of reinforcements to Pope. No, &#39;The Court-Martial of General John Pope&#39; is not alternate history. And, no, the many startling insights and new discoveries within this book are not fictions, even though they are presented within the framework of a fictional trial taking place in the afterlife. <br><br>It seems that the much maligned Union general John Pope has demanded a trial in order to once and for all clear his military reputation from 150 years of accumulated slights, slanders, and misconceptions. And who is defending Pope in the Valhalla Courthouse; none other than that peerless American defense attorney Clarence Darrow.<br><br>The packed courtroom blazes with electricity and occasionally thunders in outrage as the wily Darrow pulls one white rabbit after another out of his well-stocked magician&#39;s hat in a performance that rivals his very best. But Darrow has his work cut out for him as he faces a tribunal as daunting as any that ever sat in judgment at Nuremberg, packed as it is with the ablest generals of history. Ranging across the centuries from Alexander the Great to America&#39;s George S. Patton, these masters of the military art have&mdash;like all others&mdash;long considered Pope to be a laughingstock. <br><br>Equally entertaining are the events outside the courtroom as twice each day three noted members of the press corps&mdash;including Mark Twain and Nellie Bly&mdash;furiously debate among themselves the merits of Darrow&#39;s long string of revelations. Readers can enjoy the excitement of courtroom drama as they thrill to some of the most startling discoveries in Civil War history in recent times and discover one of the fiercest but least known rivalries in American history.<br><br>This is because &#39;Court-Martial&#39; boasts as its centerpiece a rivalry that was perhaps the most fascinating and devastating in American history: the fierce competition between Union General John Pope, the darling of the radical Republicans, and Union General George McClellan, the military standard bearer of the conservative Democratic Party and later Abraham Lincoln&#39;s Democratic opponent for President in 1864. &#39;Court-Martial&#39; convincingly demonstrates for perhaps the first time the true depth and terrible impact of this fateful rivalry. <br><br>Competing with the Pope-McClellan rivalry for attention, however, is the drama of the controversy that spurred one of the most celebrated and politically volatile courtroom battles of the latter half of the 19th Century, the fifteen-year conflict between John Pope and the general officer who was court-martialed and drummed out of the army for not giving Pope his full support at Second Manassas&mdash;Major General Fitz John Porter, noted friend and prot&eacute;g&eacute; of George McClellan. <br><br>The often amazing evidence brought forward by Darrow in his client&#39;s defense is well corroborated by over 300 end notes. Some historians and Civil War aficionados may object to the placement of this new evidence inside a dramatic fictional story. But given the degree to which John Pope&#39;s military reputation has unintentionally been misrepresented and the 130 years for which this has gone on, it was felt that, in order to shake the public&#39;s long frozen opinion of John Pope free from its icebound state, the setting of a trial and the skills of an advocate of the caliber of Clarence Darrow were required.

Stonewall Jackson and the Midcourse Correction to Second Manassas

Steven E. Condon

This book presents new evidence revealing how Stonewall Jackson was able to elude the Union army twice: first to carry out his raid to Manassas Junction and later to avoid General John Pope&#39;s converging Union forces. It is an account full of surprises including a mistaken mountain, a warning that never was, and Union General John Pope&#39;s real plan for entrapping Jackson. It is all part of the untold story of the important Second Manassas Campaign (a.k.a. Second Bull Run). Second Manassas was the second of two consecutive campaigns orchestrated by Robert E. Lee by means of which he shifted the center of conflict in the Eastern Theater from the gates of Richmond, Virginia to the threshold of Washington, D.C., opening the way for Lee&#39;s first invasion of the North. This double-barreled achievement formed perhaps Lee&#39;s greatest accomplishment of the war and one with few parallels in military history. <br><br>The Second Manassas Campaign did much to enhance the reputations of Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson. It also created the legend of Union General John Pope, the man whom they defeated. According to this legend John Pope was an army commander who was prone to make one boneheaded mistake after another, a general who was totally outclassed by his renowned opponents, and a general who afterwards lied to cover up his own incompetence. One can&#39;t discuss the magnitude of Lee and Jackson&#39;s achievement in winning the Second Manassas Campaign without addressing the competence of the man whom they defeated. Because of the fact that their victory was achieved by beating a man who for all intents and purposes demonstrated himself to be a second-rate general, Lee and Jackson&#39;s achievement&mdash;despite its far reaching consequences&mdash;has always attracted less attention than have Lee&#39;s campaigns that immediately preceded and followed it, The Seven Days and Antietam, respectively. <br><br>Recent research, however, reveals that John Pope was much more than a second-rate general, as is evidenced by a proper understanding of how he performed in the days immediately preceding the Second Battle of Manassas, days in which Stonewall Jackson&#39;s abilities shone brightly. This new and surprising research achieves two ends. First it provides the real explanation of how the great Stonewall Jackson accomplished one of his greatest feats. And secondly it demonstrates that Lee and Jackson defeated much more than a second-rate general, thus placing Lee and Jackson&#39;s victory in the Second Manassas Campaign in its true perspective and revealing it to be one of the greatest accomplishments achieved by this remarkable military duo.

Kracek

Vito Tomasino

Kracek is a fighter pilot as capable of destroying his rivals with words as he is with bullets, a man as courageous on the ground as he is in the air, who sees his enemies not as faceless inhuman beings, but as good men and women on the other side of a war none of us want. <br><br>His encounters with a guerilla leader of equal resolve and intellect raise more questions about the war than answers. Despite its horrors, the two men never lose their humanity and realize an unsettling truth&ndash;they are not the enemy.

Traces of Time

Lucio Mariani

Chosen from his most recent book Farfalla e segno: Poesie scelte 1972-2009, this collection is a sort of «best of.» His earlier collection—Echoes of Memory (UPNE, 2003)—was praised and reviewed by numerous poets, including Dana Gioia and Rosanna Warren.

In The Devil's Garden

Stewart Lee Allen

From the forbidden fruit of the Old Testament to the numerous laws broken at Francois Mitterand's final meal, In the Devil's Garden is a mouth-watering history of food taboos from around the world – a smorgasbord of culinary titbits to spice up any after-dinner conversation. In a history peppered with religious extremists who would rather starve to death than violate ancient taboos, and in an age when half the world's population – from cow-loving Hindus to Kosher Jews and Western vegetarians – still live with harsh dietary restrictions, Allen reveals just how significant, and pervasive, our relationship with food is.

Letters of Note: Cats

Группа авторов

In Letters of Note: Cats, Shaun Usher collects together the most engaging missives that celebrate, eulogise, rail against and analyse the idiosyncratic ways of our feline companions.
Nikola Tesla, Elizabeth Taylor, Charles Dickens, Anne Frank, T.S. Eliot, Raymond Chandler, John Cheever, Florence Nightingale, Rachel Carson, Jack Lemmon & many more