Erik Larson is an outstanding author who takes interesting historic events and presents their story in a manner that makes readers feel as if they're wrapped up in a novel or a big budget movie. He describes his process as first finding a tale of interest from the pages of history and then supplementing it with fascinating additional details that he has gleaned from his meticulous research, likening it to decorating a Christmas tree. His method works well because he has once again delivered a literary product that is hard to put down. His latest (2024) book is called
The Demon of Unrest (subtitled "a Sage of Hubris, Heartbreak and Heroism at the Dawn of the Civil War") and his subject is the commencement of this bloody conflict, with a focus on the firing on Fort Sumter by secessionists from South Carolina.
It is the sunset of 1860 and the curse of slavery has heightened tensions between northern and southern America. The election of Abraham Lincoln on November 6, 1860 has caused southern supporters of the "peculiar institution" to fear that their way of life will be threatened, and secession fever spreads across the south. In South Carolina's Charleston harbor, all eyes are on Fort Sumter, a federal fort surrounded by secessionists. Under-manned and lacking in support from the administration of an inept and dithering President James Buchanan, the fort's commander, Major Robert Anderson, struggles to do his duty as the small force under his command faces an ever-increasing threat of aggression from the South Carolinians.
Larson tells the story of the chaotic and tense months between Lincoln's election and the event that lit the fuse for civil war in America, the firing on Fort Sumpter by Confederate forces. His description of the daily events within the fort and of the heroic and strained effort of the Union soldiers stationed there is gripping and captures the reader's interest as much as the most compelling suspense novel might. Larson introduces the reader to a cast of fascinating characters, each on their own roller-coaster ride of emotions as the drama unfolds and the participants wonder if bloodshed is in their near future. These figures include the principled Major Anderson, loyal to the Union, but also affected by his own southern roots; Edmund Ruffin, an unabashed secessionist who continues to stir the pot for disunion, unconcerned about the consequences of his actions; the southern diarist and Charleston socialite Mary Chesnut, who provides insight into how the southern secessionists saw things; and the war's most central figure, Abraham Lincoln, conflicted with a desire to avert a war, while adhering to the principle of protecting and preserving the union.
Larson draws from an impressive array of sources to give the reader an appreciation of the tension that existed in the midst of this stressful and pressure packed time in the nations history, doing so from a multiplicity of fascinating perspectives. The resulting product is no less than one might expect from an author of Larson's talent. He reminds the reader that history is not simply a matter of dates and events such as election results or battles. History affects people's lives and Larson is masterful in giving the reader an appreciation of how those affected by the firing on Fort Sumter must have felt and of the pressures that they were under, as well as how human character assets and defects were at play in the midst of these events: courage, hubris, vainglory, pride, egotism, adherence to principle or lack thereof. In doing so, Larson makes history come alive and he makes it relevant to the reader. This book is a pleasure to read for anyone with a love of history, and is a tutorial that shows how history should be told.