One of the best books I've read from any genre on any subject. The story takes place in the midst of the Civil War close to the battle at Spotsylvania. The Union soldiers involved have less than a month to serve in their tour of duty. They are the 14th Regiment from Brooklyn, New York. All they want is to get through the final days before they are discharged so they can go back to their homes, families, or the lives they left behind. Unfortunately, they are not lucky enough to spend their remaining days in the war in easy circumstances, but one unlikely event makes their remaining time a little less stressful. They meet a Confederate group of soldiers and end up playing several games of baseball with them. It is not necessary to know much about baseball to follow that storyline, nor is it important to know much about this particular battle in the Civil War. Dyja takes this story through many different scenarios to make points about what soldiers have to go through to survive some of the most harrowing experiences anyone can imagine living or dying through. For some, the most difficult and shattering realization comes when they realize that they are fighting to win nothing. They are there simply to kill or be killed. Facing that and dealing with it encompasses most of the story. Each of the characters is forever changed by what he experiences during the last few weeks he is required to serve his obligation as a soldier. I had some issues at the beginning of this book keeping the characters straight, and that persisted through much of the book. However, I could not put this book down. It was that well written and that compelling a story. I will never look at war the same way ever again. As for the whole matter of the Civil War -- those issues are far too complicated to reduce the whole matter down to what some see as Lincoln freeing the slaves.