Battle Tactics of the American Civil War reappraises the events, the weapons used, the men of the novice armies, their leaders and the strategies employed in the Civil War which was fought with a new generation of weapons and trench systems similar to those of World War I. The author argues that the conditions of combat were little changed from those of earlier times and far from being the birthplace of modern battlefield tactics, the Civil War was in reality the last Napoleonic-style war. The book is rich in description and analysis and Griffith's wide knowledge of military history brings alive a real feeling of how the nineteenth century battle worked. An essential read for military historians and Civil War buffs. AUTHOR: Paddy Griffith is a senior lecturer in war studies at the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst and author of several other books on military subjects.