Confederates in the Attic
Dispatches from the Unfinished Civil War
Tony Horwitz
Confederates in the Attic is a present day (1998) memoir of a Civil War tour. The book is appropriately titled. When you rummage around an attic, you find all kinds of junk. Junk that’s past it’s prime, odd reminders of bygone days, nostalgic twaddle, and utter fantasies. Tony Horwitz, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, finds all of these and more. Unfortunately, he spends too much time in the shadowy recesses of his metaphorical attic.
The encountered characters and whimsical writing make the
tour fascinating, but there’s not much substance added to lore of this bloody conflict. That’s not a criticism because the book’s intent is to
investigate lingering sentiments, not to uncover facts or artifacts.
The narrative actually references a lot of Civil War history and I found no
errors of note.
Horwitz lives in Virginia, so he’s not exactly a Yankee peeking
into odd corners to discover residue views on the war. Sometimes, however, Horwitz’s Northern
education (Brown and Columbia), slants his perspective,
especially when it comes to race. I found his condescending depiction of
Southern racism off-putting, especially since in 1998, I lived in Boston, which
was far more segregated than any Southern city. Horwitz described Atlanta as
a bland and boring place unconcerned with the Civil War. My experience is that
Atlanta is more representative of Southern attitudes than those portrayed by the enthusiasts for the “Lost Cause.”
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