"A valuable contribution to Southern Civil War literature, not only for its descriptions of soldier life. She also reveals much about antebellum and post-bellum society in Richmond and dissemination of Lost Cause propaganda, as well as examining a Welsh family’s heritage in the Old World and success in the New. No reader will be disappointed in this gem of research and reporting."—
Kendra Brown,
Journal of America's Military Past
“The Spirits of Bad Men Made Perfect has so much more in it than Jones’s diary. Ms. Jones, in fleshing out her relatives life, has compiled a thoroughly researched documentary of the Welsh immigrant experience in antebellum Richmond. . . .
The book surprised me. Objective, thoroughly detailed, and rich in social and political history, I found it illuminating and thought provoking.”—John Michael Priest,
Civil War News
“In expanding her study's purview beyond a brief Civil War diary to encompass its writer's personal, family, and professional connections with Richmond commerce, culture, and society over many decades, Constance Hall Jones has created a work of significant historiographical value on multiple levels. The Spirits of Bad Men Made Perfect is highly recommended.”—
Andrew J. Wagenhoffer,
Civil War Books and Authors
"An inherently fascinating and impressively informative Civil War biography"
—Midwest Book Review
“Witty, candid, and informative, the diary illuminates the harrowing experiences of an artillerist in the Army of Northern Virginia. Constance Hall Jones has performed a valuable service by making it available to scholars and lay readers alike.”—
Michael E. Woods, author of
Bleeding Kansas: Slavery, Sectionalism, and Civil War on the Missouri-Kansas Border
“This book is not a dry chronicling of daily life in the ranks. Rather, Jones used his diary as a confessional, digging deep in his interior world to confront war’s absurdities, and reminding us that scores of Civil War soldiers were deeply introspective when it came to the killing and dying of war.”—
Peter S. Carmichael, author of
War for the Common Soldier: How Men Thought, Fought, and Survived in Civil War Armies
“Jones’s compelling portrait of her ancestor takes us on a sweeping journey from his family’s origins in Wales to Industrial Richmond to the fall of the Confederate Capital and the making of the Lost Cause myth, all the while breaking stereotypes of the ‘typical’ Southern soldier.”—
Gregg D. Kimball, author of
American City, Southern Place: A Cultural History of Antebellum Richmond
“As lush with literary allusions as it is sharp with critiques of military life, the diary of William Ellis Jones epitomizes the soldier’s plight—the relentless sickness, deprivation, and discipline—as well as the small comforts of friends, drink, and reading.”—
Kathryn Shively Meier, author of
Nature’s Civil War: Common Soldiers and the Environment in 1862 Virginia
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