"Smith's sensory history of the Civil War brings a dramatic new perspective to bear on this transformative event that gave rebirth to a nation .[A] foundational work, both in sensory history and in the emergent field of conflict and the senses. It yields many important insights into the lived experience of the Civil War, and is certain to inspire further research into what ranks as the most traumatic event in US history."--David Howes, Southern Spaces
"[H]ighly readable prose....An able demonstration of sensory history..."--Alexandre F. Caillot, H-War
"'The real war will never get in the books.' This may be the most famous sentence ever written about the Civil War... Even before its official start in 2011, the Civil War sesquicentennial has brought many attempts to prove [Walt] Whitman wrong...[P]erhaps most striking is the surge of books that belong to what might be called the school of gore--exemplified most recently by Mark M. Smith's The Smell of Battle, the Taste of Siege: A Sensory History of the Civil War--books that almost seem to savor the range of ways in which living bodies were converted into corpses by fire or disease, in mud or in bed, quickly enough to block awareness of death's arrival, or slowly enough to taunt the dying with false promises of reprieve."--The New York Review of Books
"Even for jaded Civil War readers who think they have explored the war from every conceivable angle, this is fresh material compellingly explored...Mr. Smith is onto something original and important, and his relentless intensity, rigorous attention to detail and dazzling vocabulary make for a beguiling, if occasionally numbing, read."--Wall Street Journal
"Eminently readable...The Smell of Battle is an unconventional history of the Civil War, written with special attention to olfaction, touch, taste, sight, and hearing. It joins other recent histories of the war--Drew Gilpin Faust's This Republic of Suffering: Death and the American Civil War; Michael C.C. Adams' Living Hell: The Dark Side of the Civil War -- in trying to represent the war's massive levels of death and disruption so that 21st-century readers will really feel the history, deep in their bones...Sensory history, The Smell of Battle makes clear, is more than just an exercise in providing colorful detail...A book like Smith's, which tries to put reports of sights, sounds, and tastes in context, is a powerful argument for the importance of reading original historical sources while trying to understand the social mores of the time."--Slate
"The Smell of Battle, the Taste of Siege is an incredible book, one not only to read but also to be felt. Using diaries and letters, it provides us with a look at what it must have been like to be there--how it sounded, smelled, tasted and felt. Well-written and moving at times, it provides readers with an aspect of the war that has been neglected by historians."--Bowling Green Daily News
"[T]his book is a vital first step in making sense of the Civil War's sensate past. It will sharpen historians' sensibilities of how combatants processed 'the smells of battle, the tastes of sieges, the traumatic pain of injury, the sights of engagement, and the sounds of strife, loss, and victory.' It will encourage historians to subject other events to similar analysis--'to turn up the volume, to make the whiffs smell, the caresses touch.'"--Chronicle Review
"Historians often ask readers to imagine the intense sights, sounds, and smells of battle. Smith goes one step further and explores how such sensory assaults affect the conduct of war itself...Smith gets into these gritty details by narrating some of the most important encounters of the American Civil War: the noise of the shelling of Fort Sumter; the confusion caused by the proliferation of different uniforms and badges at the First Battle of Bull Run; the stench of death at Gettysburg, which lingered from July to October; the hunger caused by the siege of Vicksburg; and the claustrophobic conditions faced by the crew of a crude Confederate submarine."--Foreign Affairs
"Turning his historical eye (and ear and nose...) to the sensory experience of war provides Smith the opportunity to write more evocatively than most historians, to bring to life the individualized experience of war--the howl of the cannons, the smell of burning horses, the taste of mule meat--in ways other histories cannot."--Failure Magazine
"With The Smell of Battle, the Taste of Siege Smith braids his interest in the senses and Civil War history into a burnished gem of a book that bracingly defamiliarizes intensively worked terrain...Graceful, insightful, and forceful in its brevity, this book should earn a place as a touchstone of contemporary Civil War historiography."--Journal of American History
"Many Americans experienced their Civil War as a cacophony of exploding shells, the sight of burning buildings, the stench of rotting corpses, the taste of spoiled rations in the armies or mule meat in starving cities under siege, and the touch of unwashed bodies crowded in small spaces. A pioneer in the field of 'sensory history,' Mark Smith re-creates these unpleasant experiences as closely as possible through the medium of the printed word."--James McPherson, author of Battle Cry of Freedom, winner of the Pulitzer Prize
"Recovering the human experience of the Civil War is difficult with even the best literary sources-which makes Mark M. Smith's exploration of the conflict's sensory landscape especially valuable. From the cramped interior of the submarine Hunley to the grim living conditions among the besieged population of Vicksburg, Smith brings readers into a world of sights, smells, and sounds that add texture to our understanding of the nation's transformative trauma."--Gary W. Gallagher, author of The Union War
"Smith, one of the most imaginative and creative of historians of the United States and a pioneer in the History of the Senses, evokes the immediacy of war, calling forth the feelings of battle by eliciting the use of the senses. More than an eye-witness account, this book arouses the ear, the taste, the feel, and the smell of war. Smith fuses overwhelming sights as they mingle with discordant sounds, rancid tastes, foul odors, and close feel. No mere intellectual exercise, this study presents a sensory perspective on Civil War history as it was experienced and shows how the senses affect war's outcomes. Introducing the senses as forces and factors relevant to making war and to the suffering caused by battle, Smith has written a work that is an essential contribution to the study of the Civil War and to war in general."--Orville Vernon Burton, author The Age of Lincoln