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Hope Professor Publishes Book on
Civil War Writings of Ambrose Bierce
Posted June 26, 2002
HOLLAND -- "Phantoms of a Blood-Stained Period:
The Complete Civil War Writings of Ambrose Bierce," a book
co-edited by Dr. David Klooster of the Hope College English
faculty, has just been published by the University of
Massachusetts Press.
The idea for the book grew out of a course on
"Literature of the American Civil War" that Klooster and co-
editor Russell Duncan, now of the University of Copenhagen,
taught together at John Carroll University when both were
faculty members there. As they read and studied a wide
range of books about the war, they realized that Bierce
wrote with unusual insight and with astonishing power about
the battlefield.
"Because he's the only writer who actually fought
in the war, his works deserve to be better known," Klooster
said.
The book gathers for the first time virtually
everything Bierce wrote about the war, from the battlefield
maps he drew as a topographical officer for the Union to his
masterful short stories, from the detailed memoirs of
specific battles to his final bittersweet ruminations before
he disappeared into Mexico in 1914. It also includes a
detailed 25-page introduction that is valuable in placing
Bierce in historical context.
The collection is organized chronologically,
following Bierce's participation in a wide range of battles,
from the early skirmishes in the West Virginia mountains to
the bloodbaths at Shiloh and Chickamauga and his near-fatal
wounding at Kennesaw Mountain. His overlapping accounts of
the events provide a record of the sights and sounds of the
battlefield, the psychological traumas the war induced in
its soldiers, and the memories that would haunt survivors
for the rest of their lives.
Writing in the 1880s and 1890s, at a time when
both the North and the South were erecting monuments to the
heroes and glories of the war, Bierce insisted that his
readers confront what really happened. Rather than
celebrate causes and comrades, Bierce's fiction and memoirs
describe the brutal realities of the Civil War battlefield.
Michael W. Schaefer, author of "Just What War Is:
The Civil War Writings of De Forest and Bierce," says of the
book, "The main argument, that Bierce's Civil War writings
are undeservedly unknown to all but a small group of
specialists, is powerfully borne out by this excellent
collection of his work and by the editors' own fine work in
placing these pieces in their historical, cultural, and
literary contexts. This book makes a highly significant
contribution to American literary studies."
Pulitzer-Prize winning historian William S.
McFeely notes, "Bierce writes with great strength and never
hides from us the ugliness of war. This book will stand
beside such equally powerful works as 'All Quiet on the
Western Front' and 'The Things They Carried' in the canon on
modern war."
Klooster has been a member of the Hope College
English faculty since the fall of 2000. He was previously a
faculty member at DePauw University in Indiana and, most
recently, at John Carroll University in Ohio.
He is co-author of "The Writer's Community" (1995)
and co-editor of "Ideas without Boundaries: International
Education Reform through Reading and Writing for Critical
Thinking" (2001). He earned his B.A. from Calvin College,
his M.A. from the University of Chicago, and his Ph.D. from
Boston College.
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