JULY 1998 -- BOOK REVIEWS
- JON F. SENSBACH, A Separate Canaan: The Making of an Afro-Moravian World in North Carolina, 1763-1840, by Lloyd Johnson
- CRAIG S. CHAPMAN, More Terrible Than Victory: North Carolina's Bloody Bethel Regiment, 1861-1865, by Jackson Marshall
- ANASTATIA SIMS, The Power of Femininity in the New South: Women's Organizations and Politics in North Carolina, 1880-1930, by Elna C. Green
- JONATHAN H. POSTON, The Building of Charleston: A Guide to the City's Architecture, by Kathleen B. Wyche
- MARLI F. WEINER, Mistresses and Slaves: Plantation Women in South Carolina, 1830-80, by Carolyn Williams
- ELIZABETH R. VARON, We Mean To Be Counted: White Women and Politics in Antebellum Virginia, by Sarah E. Gardner
- WARREN R. HOFSTRA, George Washington and the Virginia Backcountry, by Robert M. Calhoon
- ALLEN JAYNE, Jefferson's Declaration of Independence: Origins, Philosophy, and Theology, by Robert B. Mullin
- WILLIAM H. ADAMS, The Paris Years of Thomas Jefferson, by Lloyd Kramer
- WALTER T. DURHAM, Volunteer Forty-Niners: Tennesseans and the California Gold Rush, by Brian E. Crowson
- WILLIAM R. MITCHELL, J. Neel Reid Architect of Hentz, Reid and Adler and the Georgia School of Classicists, by Debra K. Bevin
- ROBERT L. BLAKELY and JUDITH M. HARRINGTON, Bones in the Basement: Postmortem Racism in Nineteenth-Century Medical Training, by Margaret Humphreys
- JOHN A. HARDIN, Fifty Years of Segregation: Black Higher Education in Kentucky, 1904-1954, by Aingred G. Dunston
- GARY W. GALLAGHER, The Confederate War: How Popular Will, Nationalism, and Military Strategy Could Not Stave Off Defeat, by Steven E. Woodworth
- MICHAEL W. SCHAEFER, Just What War Is: The Civil War Writings of De Forest and Bierce, by John L. Bell
- BRUCE TAP, Over Lincoln's Shoulder: The Committee on the Conduct of the War, by William C. Harris
- GABOR S. BORITT, The Gettysburg Nobody Knows, by Wyatt C. Hornsby
- EDWARD A. MILLER JR., The Black Civil War Soldiers of Illinois: The Story of the Twenty-ninth U.S. Colored Infantry, by Christopher A. Graham
- MARTHA HODES, White Women, Black Men: Illicit Sex in the Nineteenth-Century South, by Phillip A. Gibbs
- BOBBI MALONE, Rabbi Max Heller: Reformer, Zionist, Southerner, 1860-1929, by Sheldon Hanft
- SAMUEL L. WEBB, Two-Party Politics in the One-Party South: Alabama's Hill Country, 1874-1920, by Randolph C. Horn
- DONALD G. NIEMAN, Freedom, Racism and Reconstruction: Collected Writings of LaWanda Cox, by Susan E. O'Donovan
- ROBERT H. ZIEGER, Southern Labor in Transition, 1940-1995, by Glenn T. Eskew
- JOHN H. FRANKLIN and JOHN W. FRANKLIN, eds., My Life and an Era: The Autobiography of Buck Colbert Franklin, by Ken Keppel
- CAROL B. STACK, Call to Home: African Americans Reclaim the Rural South, by Loretta Hines
- PHILIP S. FONER and ROBERT J. BRANHAM, Lift Every Voice: African American Oratory, 1787-1900, by Linda O. McMurry
- SAM W. HAYNES and CHRISTOPHER MORRIS, Manifest Destiny and Empire: American Antebellum Expansionism, by Eric H. Walther
- CHRIS DIXON, Perfecting the Family: Antislavery Marriages in Nineteenth-Century America, by Carolyn J. Lawes
- NINA MJAGKIJ and MARGARET SPRATT, Men and Women Adrift: The YMCA and the YWCA in the City, by Michael T. Coventry
- VIRGINIA G. DRACHMAN, Sisters in Law: Women Lawyers in Modern American History, by Memory F. Mitchell
- STEVEN J. DINER, A Very Different Age: Americans of the Progressive Era, by Jim Sumner
- PRISCILLA MUROLO, The Common Ground of Womanhood: Class, Gender, and Working Girls' Clubs, 1884-1928, by Janann Sherman
- DAVID LEEMING and JAKE PAGE, The Mythology of Native North America, by Arris Oakley
- SUSAN A. BREWER, To Win the Peace: British Propaganda in the United States during World War II, by Henry E. Mattox
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