
Teresa K. (
oct1970) reviewed on 3/5/2006...
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
Born into one of the best families of Baton Rouge, Sarah Morgan was not yet twenty when she began her diary in January 1962, nine months after the start of the Civil War.
This is wonderful. Great description of day to day life.
This is one of the best Civil War accounts from a womans perspective I've ever read. Although Sarah is a little stuffy in the begining, I became emotionally envolved with her story. Through her personal thought in her diary, began in 1862, one gets a full glimps of life for a southern woman during this period of American history.
While in the beginning of this book (diary) you don't really like the stuck up spoiled character, as soon as the civil war hits and they lose everything, it becomes really interesting. What I found most interesting was honestly their day to day life and how they 'did things' back then..and her line of 'thinking' throughout the book is so different from how we reason and think things out today as far as our interactions with others. I've read a lot of civil war novels and it was great to read a diary from the time to see how they actually felt..those who experienced it.