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Samuel Chamberlain's
My Confession is a classic, ribald tale of nineteenth-century life.
Perhaps the best written account of a soldier's adventures and
misadventures in the Mexican War and its aftermath, this
unexpurgated edition is now available for the first time, complete
with over 150 of Chamberlain's wonderful textual illustrations
reproduced in full color. If you enjoyed the Chamberlain paintings
assembled in Sam Chamberlain's Mexican War:The San Jacinto Museum of
History Paintings, you will be fascinated by the tale in My
Confession that goes with it and beyond it into Chamberlain's
adventures with the scalp-hunting Glanton Gang (the story that
Cormac McCarthy used as the basis for his celebrated novel Blood
Meridian).
My Confession is the story of Samuel Chamberlain, a
Boston boy who hoped to be a theological student but could not
control his amorous and pugilistic inclinations and so left for the
West. According to his "Confession," he seduced countless women in
the U.S. and Mexico, never missed a fandango, fought gallantly
against Mexican guerrillas, and rode with the First Dragoons into
the Battle of Buena Vista. His remarkable story is pure melodrama;
but Goetzmann has proven by his painstaking research that much of it
is true.
The editor's annotations are a valuable contribution to
an account that virtually every historian of the Mexican War has
used.
William H. Goetzmann is the Jack S. Blanton Sr. Professor
of History at the University of Texas at Austin.
ISBN
978-0-87611-156-7; 0-87611-156-8 (cloth), 978-0-87611-157-4; 0-87611-156-8 (limited). 10 x 13 in., 400 pp., 160
color illustrations, maps, index. Cloth, $60.00 Member's price,
$48.00 Limited edition, $165.00 Member's price, $132.00
Visit the Chamberlain web
site for more information on this intriguing book.
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