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$35.00
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Blow, Michael,
A SHIP TO REMEMBER: The Maine and the Spanish-American War.
VG/VG. Jacket in mylar.
(NY: William Morrow & Company, 1992).
Map on endpages, illustrations, "source notes", bibliography, index, 496 pages.
~~~
On the misty Tuesday evening of February 15, 1898, the battleship Maine
blew up in Havana Harbor, with the loss of 260 lives. A court of inquiry
determined that a mine had caused the disaster: No blame was assigned.
Yet the United States soon rushed into a war that thrust it on a course
of expansion and brought responsibilities and commitments that still
plague the nation almost a century later. A Ship to Remember
tells two riveting stories. The first is the mystery of the Maine --
how, why, and by whom she was destroyed--a puzzle that has defied
solution over the years. Michael Blow's vivid account of the tragedy
and the ensuing investigations is the most comprehensive ever published.
The larger narrative of the book is a full-scale history of the
Spanish-American War and its satellite conflicts, the Cuban revolution
of 1895 and the Philippine "insurrection" of 1899-1902. Blow
dramatically re-creates the major battles of the war and gives new
meaning to their consequences. As one naval officer put it, "An hour
or two at Manila, an hour or two at Santiago, and the maps of the
world were changed." The preeminent figure of the period, as civilian
and soldier, was the indomitable Theodore Roosevelt--assistant
secretary of the navy, colonel of the Rough Riders, president. His
prodigious energy and single-minded purpose seemed almost to hurl
the nation into a new century. But Roosevelt is only one of the
important players. The book's compelling cast of characters includes
William Randolph Hearst, whose "new journalism" gives fresh meaning to
the word "yellow"; reporter and illustrator Frederic Remington
portraying the glory and the misery of the battle for the San Juan
Heights; young Winston Churchill, who takes his first lesson in
guerrilla warfare in Cuba; the legendary Richard Harding Davis
exposing the horror of Spanish concentration camps; General
Valeriano Weyler, the man Hearst called "butcher," who learned
how to wage total war from William Tecumseh Sherman.
~~~ Published in 1992 at $27.50,
now OUT OF PRINT.
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$20.00

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Sternlicht, Sanford,
MCKINLEY'S BULLDOG: THE BATTLESHIP OREGON.
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