
关于
Elizabeth Custer has penned an engaging portrait of 1870’s life on a U.S. cavalry post in the Dakotas, just before her husband and his troops met their tragic deaths in the Battle of the Little Big Horn. “Our life,” she writes, “was often as separate from the rest of the world as if we had been living on an island in the ocean.” Her portrait of her husband, General George Armstrong Custer is laudatory—his intellect, his love of dogs (he kept a hunting pack of 40 at the post); but, Boots and Saddles is more than just a memorial. She observes with keen insight, the varied persons, from Indian scouts, to enlisted men, to officer’s wives, who make up the army “family,” on the post. Her sympathetic story about the regimental laundress and midwife, with its sad ending, should take a place in the army’s history of “don’t ask, don’t tell.” (Summary by Sue Anderson)
相关有声读物

Aeroplanes and Dirigibles of War
Frederick A. Talbot

Recollections of Bush Life in Australia
Henry William Haygarth

The English Governess at the Siamese Court
Anna Harriette Leonowens

Between the Lines
Boyd Cable

Narrative of the Suffering and Defeat of the North-Western Army, Under General Winchester
William Atherton

In Time Of Emergency: A Citizen's Handbook On Nuclear Attack, Natural Disasters
US Office of Civil Defense

Outwitting The Hun; My Escape From A German Prison Camp
Pat O'Brien