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The Killer Angels Audio CD – Unabridged, May 11, 2004

4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 8,883 ratings

A reissue of a Pulitzer prize-winning classic, and now the major motion picture GETTYSBURG. As a result of these acclamations, this book is considered one of the greatest novels written on the Civil War.


From the Hardcover edition.
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Editorial Reviews

Review

“The best and most realistic historical novel about war I have ever read.”
–GENERAL H. NORMAN SCHWARZKOPF

“My favorite historical novel . . . A superb re-creation of the Battle of Gettysburg, but its real importance is its insight into what the war was about, and what it meant.”
–JAMES M. MCPHERSON
Author of
Battle Cry of Freedom

“Remarkable . . . A book that changed my life . . . I had never visited Gettysburg, knew almost nothing about that battle before I read the book, but here it all came alive.”
–KEN BURNS
Filmmaker,
The Civil War

“Shaara carries [the reader] swiftly and dramatically to a climax as exciting as if it were being heard for the first time.”
–The Seattle Times



From the Hardcover edition.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Random House Audio; Unabridged edition (May 11, 2004)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Audio CD ‏ : ‎ 13 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0739309056
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0739309056
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 11.2 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.07 x 1.15 x 5.94 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 8,883 ratings

About the author

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Michael Shaara
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With the release of a newly discovered unpublished novel--The Rebel in Autumn--and the ebook releases of his three classic backlist titles: his first novel, The Broken Place; his science fiction novel, The Herald; and his beloved baseball novel, For Love of the Game; and the upcoming ebook publication of 46 short stories, the works of Michael Shaara stand poised to take their place in America's literary pantheon. While his Pulitzer Prize winning novel The Killer Angels has sold millions of copies, and For Love of the Game was made into a movie that seems to be constantly on TV, his other works remain virtually unknown. Twenty-five years after his death, Michael Shaara is on the verge of being rediscovered as the versatile, talented man of letters that he was.

Michael Shaara was born in 1928 in Jersey City, N.J., the son of Michael Joseph Shaara, Sr., an Italian immigrant and union organizer, and Allene (Maxwell) Shaara. He married Helen Elizabeth Krumwiede in 1950 (marriage which ended in 1980), and had two children: Jeffrey and Lila Elise. Shaara graduated from Rutgers University with a B.A. in 1951, and continued with graduate studies at Columbia University (1952-53) and University of Vermont (1953-54). He knew in college that he wanted to write for a living, and his short story career began in the 1950s, selling mainly science fiction and fantasy stories to the pulp fiction magazines as well as to Cosmopolitan, Galaxy, Fantastic Universe, Playboy, Redbook and the Saturday Evening Post, winning several awards. Shaara's themes reflected his times and dealt with everyday events, as well as with aliens, and the devastation of complete cities from nuclear disasters. In 1959, Shaara was hired as an instructor of English at Florida State University, and by 1968, he had risen to the position of Associate Professor.

Michael Shaara was teaching creative writing at Florida State University while writing his first novel, The Broken Place. Shaara had worked numerous odd jobs before becoming a teacher, including time spent as a merchant seaman and police officer. Under contract to deliver The Broken Place, the stress of the writing and teaching a full course load caused him to have a serious, nearly fatal heart attack. He was even pronounced dead while the ER doctors attempted to revive him. This near-death experience no doubt colored his writing of The Broken Place, as did his army experience (a paratrooper with the 82nd Airborne during peace time), his amateur boxing career, and his marriage to his college sweetheart, Helen Elizabeth Krumwiede, the model for Lise Hoffman. The Broken Place was published to great literary acclaim--Shaara was often compared to Ernest Hemingway in the reviews--but few sales.

His second novel, The Rebel In Autumn, was based on an event at Florida State. Rebel was written during the campus protests of the late 1960s and is set in 1969. His agent began shopping the book in 1970, just a few short months before the Ohio National Guard shot into a crowd of student protesters at Kent State University, killing four, in an eerie echo of Rebel's climactic scene. And so the book never saw the light of day, although it is a beautifully written and artfully crafted novel, perhaps the equal of his next novel, The Killer Angels.

In 1972, while teaching an FSU abroad program in Italy, Shaara had a devastating motorcycle accident, leaving him unconscious for weeks. He suffered from a severe brain injury, and Shaara later said that his eyes were not "working together" and that he could not read very much. Shaara also had difficulty with both speech and thought patterns. Emotionally, he suffered from bouts of depression.

Shaara won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1975 for The Killer Angels, his second published novel, a brilliant portrayal of the Battle of Gettysburg. But even that was a struggle. It took Shaara years to research the book, even enlisting his then teenage son Jeff to crawl around under the brush at Gettysburg in order to find long-covered up markers. The Killer Angels was rejected by fifteen publishers before the small, independent, and long defunct David McKay Company purchased the manuscript. The Killer Angels was another critical success and commercial flop, as the public wasn't interested in war stories in the aftermath of the Vietnam War. It wasn't until five years after Shaara's death that The Killer Angels hit the bestseller lists, climbing all the way to #1 on The New York Times list.

It would be seven years before Shaara would publish another novel. The Herald came out in 1981 and hearkened back to Shaara's early career writing science fiction for magazines. The Herald is a very dark post-apocalyptic story, perhaps related to Shaara's continuing financial failures as a writer. The glimmer of hope at the end of the novel speaks to the spark that lurked beneath Shaara's misanthropic outlook. While it garnered some positive reviews, it was clear that The Herald was not going to find commercial success either.

A second heart attack killed Shaara in 1988 at the age of 59.

Shaara's first financially successful novel was published posthumously--For Love of the Game. The beloved baseball novel was quickly snapped up by the movies and made into a film with Kevin Costner playing the lead. But before Game came the movie "Gettysburg" directed by Ron Maxwell, financed by Ted Turner. Starring Martin Sheen as Robert E. Lee and Jeff Daniels as Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain, Sam Elliot and Tom Berenger among others. The movie was a hit, and turned the forgotten novel behind it--The Killer Angels--into a huge success. It is now required reading at many schools, including West Point, and is generally considered one of the greatest Civil War novels ever written.

With the publication of The Rebel in Autumn, and the release of The Broken Place, The Herald and For Love of the Game as ebooks, all the Shaara novels will now be available for the first time. The publication of Rebel is a major literary event--how often does a lost manuscript from a Pulitzer Prize winning author turn up...43 years after it was written and 25 years after its author's death?

Michael Shaara's son, Jeff Shaara, has taken up his father's mantle of writing historical fiction, writing bestselling novels of the Civil War, Mexican War, WWI and WWII, enjoying commercial success in his lifetime the way his father was never able to. Michael Shaara's daughter, Lila, also published two novels.

The Michael Shaara papers today reside at the Bienes Museum at the Broward County Public Library in Florida. http://www.broward.org/library/bienes/pages/bienesshaara.aspx

Customer reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
4.7 out of 5
8,883 global ratings
This book has touched my heart.
5 Stars
This book has touched my heart.
I am from Argentina. A country with many many political, social, and economy problems. We have never suffered slavery in Argentina. My son assisting 6th Grade in United States of America inspired me to know the history in this beautiful country. This book touched my heart. The story is good, interesting to keep reading this book, but sad. It’s terrible when thousands of people needed to die because any cause. This book touched my heart when at the end, It gives us a learning: How can they fight so hard, them Johnnies, and all for slavery? When you ask them prisoners, they never talk about slavery. How do you explain that? If it weren’t for the slaves, there’d never have been no war. That’s what them fellers died for. Animal meat: the Killer Angels. There all equal now.”
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on November 13, 1998
Fabulous insight into the military mind, the minds of men, the minds of people dedicated to actions and ideals greater than themselves.
Kurt Vonnegut is said to have revealed the secret of fiction as, "Create characters the reader cares about, then do something terrible to them." Mr. Shaara gives us a dozen characters worth caring about -- from both armies -- and then plunges them into one of the most terrible things to happen on American soil: the cataclysmic Battle of Gettysburg. The book is a model of storytelling, and beautifully written. My brother, who earned a Masters in American History just for the fun of it, warned me to start it early in the day because I would not want to put it down. Instead, I savored it for a week; thinking often during my days and nights of these men and their trials.
I read a lot of history and biography, but this is the first book I have ever read on the American Civil War, a/k/a the War Between the States, unless you count the Red Badge of Courage. I was always repulsed by the massive slaughter of Americans by Americans over human slavery. I relented after a business associate suggested that the Gettysburg Battlefield would be a perfect location for one of our sales executive training sessions. He recommended the novel The Killer Angels and Gettysburg , the movie it inspired, as the first steps in my personal research. He assured me that The Killer Angels, though written in the style of a novel, was a highly accurate portrayal of the action and the command challenges at Gettysburg. Since he had taught Civil War history at West Point, I took his advice. [The first words of the book are: "This is the story of the battle of Gettysburg, told from the viewpoints of Robert E. Lee and James Longstreet and some of the other men who fought there. ... I have not consciously changed any fact."]
Authors historical and especially military to often find it tempting to display their research and learning by filling each paragraph with jargon and arcania. Michael Shaara stays with concretes and vivid emotions. The writing is so clear that I stopped noticing the style. I was there in the camps, under the artillery, behind the stone wall. I marched, I bled, I prayed that Lee would not order the charge. Michael Shaara takes you there, as soldiers saw the war and army life, with its comradely and outdoorsy appeal as well as its sorrow and terror. "Yet you learn to love it. Isn't that amazing? Long marches and no rest, up very early in the morning and asleep late in the rain, and there's a marvelous excitement to it, a joy to wake in the morning and feel the army all around you and see the campfires in the morning and smell the coffee..." [p. 125]
Leadership in those days, as it is today, was all about character, competence, and conduct. As Shaara wrote of Gen. Armistead: "He was one of the men who would hold ground if it could be held; he would die for a word. He was a man to depend on, and there was this truth about war: it taught you the men you could depend on."
Other aspects of war are not so clear, such as the reason for the conflict and the motivation of the men who volunteered to fight. Shaara does a masterful job of bringing the complex and unresolvable issues to the reader through the thoughts and arguments of the participants. The conversation on causes and conscience between a Union Colonel and his master Sargent fills the best two pages of the book and explains the title, too. [See pp. 188-9] There's no better summary of their relationship than when the proud and practical Sergeant says, "Colonel, you're a lovely man. I see at last a great difference between us, and yet I admire ye, lad. You're an idealist, praise be." It takes both kinds to make an army.
The Killer Angels offers many such insights to the minds of the men who were there, their agonized choices and their loss of choice to duty and circumstance. As when Longstreet was ordered by Lee to command his men into a charge sure to end in carnage and defeat: "What was needed now was control, absolute control. Lee was right about that: a man who could not control himself had no right to command an army. They must not know my doubts, they must not. So I will send them all forward and say nothing, except what must be said. But he looked down at his hands. They were trembling. Control took a few moments. He was not sure he could do it." Shaara gives us not just heroes, but humanity: raw and real.
I would add to Vonnegut's recipe one requirement to elevate a good story into a classic text: "Show us people and circumstances which illuminate our own lives." The Killer Angels also excels in that, with insights for all of us, though mainly in safer careers and seeming to compete for lower stakes. Death seldom visits us in our jobs, yet don't doubt that you are giving your life for it, if only by the hour. The end is the same for us as it was for them; glory now harder to find. As Shaara has Lee say, "And does it matter after all who wins? Was that ever really the question? Will God ask that question, in the end?" [p. 360]
Forgive me, please, my trespass. The Killer Angels spawns such thoughts. Therein lies its value.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 22, 2023
Michael Shaara's The Killer Angels may be the best historical novel I've ever read. (The only close competitor would be Herman Wouk's Winds of War duology, but that is so different in nature as not to be comparable.) My admiration of The Killer Angels is of course widely shared. It won a Pulitzer in 1975 and many other awards.

The Killer Angels tells the story of the Battle of Gettysburg from the points of view of some of the military leaders involved. There are 23 chapters. Seven are told from the point of view of Union colonel Joshua Chamberlain, six from the point of view of Confederate general James Longstreet. The third-most featured is Confederate commander-in-chief Robert E Lee, who gets four chapters. I was surprised that so much attention was given to two relatively obscure (to me, at the time) men. Now I know all you Civil War buffs out there are scoffing at me for calling Chamberlain and Longstreet "obscure". Fair enough. But I am not, I think, telling a lie when I say that a kid who learned what he or she knew about the American Civil War in public school in the northeastern USA might never have heard the names of Chamberlain and Longstreet, or at least not heard them in such a way as to be likely to remember a few years later. That was me.

The Killer Angels was the first step in remedying this educational defect. Although still far from expert on the Civil War, I have read many a book (including, for instance, Shelby Foote's masterful Civil War trilogy, not to mention that I am at this moment reading Elizabeth Varon's new biography of Longstreet). And I spent one of the more memorable days of my life wandering around Gettysburg National Military Park.

Chamberlain is in one way an obvious choice for point of view, because he led one of the most exciting and important actions of the battle, the Defense of Little Round Top. Longstreet is a less obvious choice. Longstreet's role in the battle became controversial because after the war he became a Radical Republican -- a prominent defender of the rights of black people. For this he was vilified as a traitor by Lost Cause Confederate veterans and retroactively blamed for the loss at Gettysburg. Shaara's picture of Longstreet is relatively sympathetic.

If you want an exciting, readable, yet for the most part detailed and accurate fictional presentation of one of the most important battles in American history, you will not do better than The Killer Angels.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 26, 2023
Incredible insights into the thoughts behind both sides of the war. I would have never picked this one up on my own but I am really grateful to have read it with the high school students in our co-op.
Reviewed in the United States on February 16, 2024
The Shaara’s are some of my favorite writers of historical fiction and this book is my absolute favorite of all of them. I love it so much that I recommend it to anyone I know who is going to visit Gettysburg. It can give you an understanding of the battle in a way unlike any other book that I have read. Reading it gives you a heads up as to how and where the battle played out over the those threes day in July of 1863. Historically it holds water with many of the historical books of the same battle. Shaara has a way of fleshing out historical personalities that draw you to them. You feel how they feel and feel for them. To me it is like you are there! Truly an amazing work about the battle of Gettysburg. I highly recommend it!
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Top reviews from other countries

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Julie Burtch
5.0 out of 5 stars beautifully written!
Reviewed in Canada on June 4, 2023
Wow! This fictional account of the civil war takes you right into the battlefield, gives insight into the men leading both armies, the horror, the pain and the destruction.
Debbie
5.0 out of 5 stars Well written and very enjoyable
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 17, 2024
Purchased as a gift, I am told this was an interesting book, well written.
Based on a true story it was very informative. My husband thought that the way it was written, with the different viewpoints from the different generals provided more detailed facts and reasoning rather than sweeping generalised statements.
The illustrations added to the understanding of the text and by the end of the book, my husband felt he had learned a lot more of the civil war history.
He's looking forward to going back and reviewing the different thought patterns of the various generals.
The letter from the author at the start of the book sums the book up very well.

Certainly a great book to give as a gift or a treat for yourself!
Would definately recommend.
Ceterum censeo
5.0 out of 5 stars Super Überblick über den Verlauf der Schlacht
Reviewed in Germany on December 25, 2023
Das Buch bietet einen sehr genauen Überblick über den Verlauf der Kämpfe, die Personen werden gut beschrieben. Besonders sympathisch finde ich, dass es keine "Guten" und "Bösen" gibt, sondern Nord-
und Südstaatler gleichberechtigt behandelt werden. Obwohl Englisch, ist das Buch sehr gut zu lesen.
Auch die Karten sind gut gestaltet.
Cliente Amazon
5.0 out of 5 stars Insuperable
Reviewed in Spain on September 13, 2021
Es la mejor lección de liderazgo . Analiza los caracteres de los diferentes oficiales generales que participaron en la batalla para mostrarnos sus diferentes estilos de mando
Karan
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant Civil War Fiction
Reviewed in India on June 5, 2021
This is my first read on the American Civil War. Although it's a novel about the war but nonetheless describes the battle of Gettysburg very well for anyone who's interested in the subject. Brilliantly written and a very emotional account I must say. I also saw parts of the movie based on the book (Gettysburg 1993) but I found the book definitely has more impact!