"Thomas Curran's Women Making War is a desperately needed addition to the fields of Civil War military occupation, treason, and women's studies."-- Elle Harvell , The Journal of the Civil War Era "By the end of this book, the reader should be convinced of Curran's main point: women made war on the Union and the Union made war on women. This is a book that adds to the historiographical discussions of the subfields of hard war, guerrilla warfare, and the Lieber Code, to name a few. By explicitly focusing on women, Curran helps to further reinvigorate these fields and a body of literature that has used terms like "civilian" when they are really referring to women."-- Joseph M. Beilein Jr. , Missouri Historical Review "Curran's Women Making War makes strong contributions to Civil War women's studies, the guerrilla warfare scholarship, and the history of the Union Army's military justice system."-- Andrew J.
Wagenhoffer , Civil War Books and Authors "While Curran cites the difficulties of "incomplete records, misfiled documents, misspelled names, bad penmanship, and more," his ability to track Confederate women throughout the war is impressive and a powerful reminder of how tireless research can support a complicated argument. [R]eaders and scholars with wide-ranging interests will find Women Making War useful and fascinating."-- Heather Carlquist Walser , Civil War Monitor "Women Making War is a well-written and enlightening look at this aspect of the war and how it affected women in St. Louis"-- Sheila R. Phipps , Civil War Book Review "[T]his is a fascinating read for those interested in how 'justice' was meted out to increasing numbers of female Confederate prisoners through the war years by Union adjudicators."-- Joan Wenner , Civil War News " Women Making War takes up a worthy topic that has not received enough attention from historians. To date, it is the only full scholarly treatment of Confederate women engaged in war in the critical area of St. Louis.
The book combines prodigious research in many dispersed and difficult-to-use sources with deep knowledge of the local context. Women Making War is an excellent piece of historical writing."-- Stephanie McCurry , author of Women's War: Fighting and Surviving the American Civil War "Thomas F. Curran provides much needed insight into the lives of Confederate women who, in their efforts to subvert the Union cause, ran afoul of military authorities. Anchored by a variety of entertaining and informative primary sources, he reminds us that there is still more to explore about female agency in directing the course of the Civil War."-- Victoria E. Ott , author of Confederate Daughters: Coming of Age during the Civil War "Curran's meticulous research adds new dimensions to our understanding of politics, loyalty, and gender in wartime. It is a must-read for anyone who wants a better understanding of the roles that women played during the Civil War.
"-- Jonathan W. White , author of Midnight in America: Darkness, Sleep, and Dreams during the Civil War "As Thomas F. Curran argues, women were not simply the objects of Federal repression: they did much to promote the Confederacy. In this volume, Curran works to recover the forgotten roles women played in advancing the Confederate cause."-- Louis S. Gerteis , author of Civil War St. Louis.