I'm not sure how much of the information in this book I'll be able to recall if I ever find myself in a situation where I'm being quizzed on the american civil war, but it was still an interesting read about a time in history that I didn't know that much about.
Some of the situations described in this book were quite awful, especially when you remember that it's all real life. One thing that stood out to me was this picture that I looked at and thought "Ugh, a skeleton. Why do they always need to put pictures of skeletons in books?" but then I read the picture text and it said the word 'surviver.' I had honestly thought it was a skeleton, and looking at it and knowing that it was a living man was... some experience. War is of course an awful thing (wow, what an insightful and groundbreaking statement, I know), and I hate that sometimes it's necessary. Most of the time not, but in this situation, I think maybe it was. Them talking it out would've always been the better option, but they couldn't have just disagreed and let that be that.
No matter what, I hope that we one day reach the point where we don't need more wars. I can't see it happening anytime soon, but to tell you the truth, I'm pretty sure that we will get there eventually. It may take us a thousand years (because there is no way I'll be around to see it), but I have hope.
(wow what a groundbreaking review that turned into anti-war talk. i'm so smart. nobody has ever been anti-war before. this is progressive. good work sunshine.)
This would probably be a four-stars, but because of what I assume are problems with the translated edition, I knocked it down because it took away the reading experience. Normally I wouldn't have taken away stars over this, so it's slightly unfair, but pretty much every norwegian book I've read lately have had some kind of problem, and it was just too much. Examples of problems were that in the 'fact boxes' at the side there would be bulletpoints, but now and again the bulletpoints wouldn't be there. There would be a fact, but just not bulletpointed. Ugh. Another problem, probably the biggest, was that at one point, A SENTENCE JUST ENDED IN THE MIDDLE OF ITSELF. "Before the war he worked as". That was it. (it went something like that anyway.) Like, I'm reading this to learn. I want to know what he worked as before the war. Don't leave me hanging like that.
This was a good and educational read, so if you want to learn about the american civil war, and don't know much about it from beforehand, but you don't want to read anything heavy, I recommend checking this out. I think it's supposed to be geared towards children, but it's not sugar-coated, and there is a good balance between text and pictures.
Also, I don't know where I got this book from. It was just on my shelf. Everyone else in my family claim to have never seen it before. Weird. I have a slight suspicion that we bought it as an intended gift for one of my cousins, because this is just the kind of book he would like, but then forgot about it, but I don't know. I just decided to read it because it was on my shelf.