Rachel Chrastil is a professor of history and provost and chief academic officer at Xavier University in Cincinnati and a former Fulbright scholar. The author of Organizing for War, The Siege of Strasbourg, and How to Be Childless, she lives in Cincinnati, Ohio.
"Chrastil tells the story of the war very well, skillfully weaving
together its military, political, and social aspects. Her
descriptions of key battles are admirably clear and
accessible."--American Historical Review
"A most engaging book, distinguished by sharp insight, powerful
characterization and a strong narrative flow. It is the best modern
account of the war."--Wall Street Journal
"One of those rare history books that truly delivers on this kind
of ambitious promise." --Quillette
"Chrastil has clearly not written one of those increasingly common
recent histories of war that seem to have no battles in them. She
presents a skillful account of military mechanics. Still, where
Chrastil shines is in providing a broader societal portrait of the
conflict, particularly in France."--Washington Examiner
"A brisk, invigoratingly intelligent read, full of the colorful
personalities that governed the war but also full of the million
anonymous civilian sufferers on French soil...Bismarck's War tells
this grim story with superb narrative energy." --Open Letters
Review
"A vivid and informative story of these events and their
consequences...Chrastil's compassionate and thought-provoking
history does justice to both sides of this legacy."
--Daily Telegraph
"A welcome new addition to the literature...[Chrastil's] book is
likely to become the standard account of the war in English."
--Literary Review
"Engrossing narrative history that offers a great overview of the
Franco-Prussian War and includes many well-selected and surprising
details that have the potential to diversify and change perceptions
of this important conflict even in readers who know the era
well."
--Engelsberg Ideas
"This is an impressive work, fluent, wide-ranging, vivid in its use
of sources, and central to an understanding of Europe's subsequent
history."
--Spectator
"Marshaling a tremendous amount of information, Chrastil clearly
demonstrates how this conflict set the stage for the
world-shattering violence of the 20th century. It's an outstanding
synthesis of a complex and vicious war."
--Publishers Weekly
"Bismarck's War brings the Franco-Prussian War to life through the
words and deeds of participants both on and off the battlefield.
Rachel Chrastil's fascinating examination of the conflict
compellingly narrates its military and political dimensions, and it
puts the war in a global context, emphasizing its human cost and
the international response to the humanitarian crisis it created.
An engrossing, compassionate, and critical interrogation of a
decisive historical event."
--Carolyn J. Eichner, author of The Paris Commune
"Rachel Chrastil has written a fresh and compelling history of the
most important European war between Waterloo and World War I. In
rich and engaging detail, she shows how it laid much of the
foundation for the wars of the twentieth century, even as it was
seen at the time, and subsequently remembered, as a relatively
conventional conflict. A tour-de-force."
--David A. Bell, Princeton University
"Rachel Chrastil colorfully describes how the Franco-Prussian War
destroyed the long European peace established after Napoleon's
defeat in 1815. Beginning as a midsummer cabinet war between
monarchs, one of them Napoleon's nephew, Bismarck's invasion of
France bogged down in winter rain and snow, and became a rancorous
war of peoples that kindled the inferno of World War I."
--Geoffrey Wawro, author of The Franco-Prussian War and A Mad
Catastrophe
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