A Woman's Wartime Journal by Dolly Sumner Lunt
Most Civil War stories focus on the soldiers. This one shows us the home front, and it's a perspective we don't get enough of. 'A Woman's Wartime Journal' is the actual diary kept by Dolly Sumner Lunt Burge (though published under her earlier married name, Lunt). She was a teacher from the North who married a Southern plantation owner and found herself widowed and in charge of a large estate in Georgia right as the war reached her doorstep.
The Story
The journal covers 1864, the year General William T. Sherman cut a path through Georgia. We follow Dolly's daily life as rumors of the approaching army turn into reality. She records everything: managing the farm with enslaved labor (a complex and troubling part of the record), the anxiety of not knowing where her Confederate soldier stepson is, and the arrival of both Confederate scouts and the massive Union force. The heart of the story is Sherman's arrival at her home, 'The Burge Plantation.' She describes the soldiers taking food, livestock, and personal belongings with a mix of fear and a fascinating, tense diplomacy. It's a close-up view of invasion, not as a military strategy, but as a deeply personal violation and a profound historical shift happening in real time.
Why You Should Read It
This book removes the filter of history. There's no hindsight here, just the immediate emotions of a woman caught in a storm. Her voice is compelling because it's unfiltered. You feel her fear when strange soldiers appear, her relief when some officers act with courtesy, and her despair as she watches her means of survival be taken away. It also forces us to sit with uncomfortable complexities. Dolly's life depended on the institution of slavery, and her writings reflect that worldview, giving us a crucial, if difficult, primary source on how the war affected (and was perceived by) Southern civilians, including slaveholders. Reading it isn't about agreeing with her; it's about understanding a lived experience.
Final Verdict
This is a must-read for anyone who loves personal histories, diaries, or wants to move beyond the battle maps of the Civil War. It's perfect for book clubs because it sparks deep discussion about perspective, survival, and the human cost of war. It's not a long book, but it's a powerful one. Just be ready—it doesn't offer easy answers, but it offers something better: a genuine, unvarnished look into the past.
Christopher Lee
6 months agoFast paced, good book.
Noah Wright
7 months agoVery interesting perspective.
Elizabeth Clark
5 months agoSolid story.
Mark Taylor
1 year agoThis book was worth my time since the narrative structure is incredibly compelling. This story will stay with me.
Paul Nguyen
1 year agoRead this on my tablet, looks great.