How Private George W. Peck Put Down the Rebellion / or, The Funny Experiences of a Raw Recruit - 1887
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About This Book
The narrator offers a comic first-person memoir of his time as a raw recruit in the rebellion, recounting bungled drills, awkward quarters, improbable skirmishes, eccentric officers, and camp life. Through short, illustrated chapters he alternates self-deprecating anecdotes with satirical observations about military boastfulness and popular war reminiscences, turning modest mishaps—horseback incidents, picket duty, makeshift medical care, poker evenings—into tall tales. The work combines episodic storytelling and humorous commentary to lampoon both the narrator's inexperience and the grand claims of celebrated commanders.
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