Bynum is to be saluted not only for her profound scholarship but for her evenhanded accounts of matters that remain volatile and controversial. . . . [This] book should be praised as an original and cogent piece of scholarship on a devilishly complicated and demanding subject.""- Washington Times;""An important book that may cause historians who are skeptical about putting too much stress on an 'inner' Civil War to rethink their position.""- American Historical Review;""Powerful, revisionist, and timely, Bynum's book combines superb history with poignant analysis of historical memory and southern racial mores.""- Choice;""Local studies have made us increasingly aware of the many different ways in which southerners experienced the Civil War. Few communities fought as much of the war on their own terms or generated as distorted yet profound a legacy afterward as did the men and women of this renegade county in Mississippi's Piney Woods. It's a fascinating story, and Victoria Bynum tells it remarkably well.""- John C. Inscoe, coauthor of The Heart of Confederate Appalachia: Western North Carolina in the Civil War