"Civil War buffs will relish the wealth of new historical insights."—Publishers Weekly
"Combining meticulous research, clear expository writing, and authoritative documentation, Silber offers a clear account of the events of this surprisingly overlooked period in the Civil War."—David Marshall, NYMAS Review
"With Twelve Days: How the Union Nearly Lost Washington in the First Days of the Civil War, author Tony Silber offers readers a thorough examination of the first days of the war, when things were far from certain and much hung in the balance. . . . His work is a valuable addition to an often neglected part of the Civil War story."—Doug Crenshaw, emergingcivilwar.com
“This is not sci-fi alternative history but a remarkable new book of narrative history by decorated journalist and entrepreneur Tony Silber. He has unearthed some of America’s most deeply hidden history and written a swift, powerfully documented narrative of twelve days that enriches our understanding of our nation, its bloodiest war, and a president whose heroism, as Silber shows us, we are only beginning to understand.”—Michael Capuzzo, New York Times best-selling author of Close to Shore and The Murder Room
“In riveting and fascinating detail, Tony Silber captures one of the most significant moments in American history. This page-turner is a must-read for anyone who has a passion for American democracy and the bold and extraordinary leadership of Abraham Lincoln during those twelve turbulent days in 1861.”—Michael Clinton, former president, marketing, and publishing director of Hearst Magazines
“Tony Silber achieves something remarkable here. He takes a 160-year-old war that you thought you knew everything about, grabs you by the lapels, and pulls you to the edge of your seat. With spare, exciting prose and a reporter’s eye for vivid detail, he gives the first two weeks after the outbreak of the Civil War the freshness and immediacy of a breaking news story.”—Charles Slack, author of Liberty’s First Crisis: Adams, Jefferson, and the Misfits Who Saved Free Speech
“Tony Silber has vividly captured a moment of astonishing peril, one in which the preservation of the Union and the very future of the nation hung in the balance. Deeply researched and compellingly told, it’s a gripping tale offering a fresh look at the leaders, decisions, and events that continue to resonate today.”—Ellen B. Meacham, author of Delta Epiphany: Robert F. Kennedy in Mississippi
“A remarkably evocative story of our Union at a moment of profound peril. Reading Twelve Days, one can feel the ominous crackling of anger and division in the streets of Washington and sense the brutal forces gathering just over the horizon. At that point in our history it would take a genius president and a devastating bloodletting to preserve the Union. Having been an unhappy target of the insurrection of January 6, I feel the disturbing parallels deep in my bones. We are not guaranteed a genius president. Americans today should closely study those things that stoke division and violence in order to play their part in our democracy's preservation.”—Jim Himes, U.S. Representative, Fourth Connecticut Congressional District
“Because I’m a notorious stickler for clear sourcing, I’m always skeptical of fly-on-the-wall accounts of dramatic events. And here Tony Silber has attempted exactly that—with an account, no less, of people and events that shaped, and saved, America more than 150 years ago. But he’s done it! He’s written a true drama of how Abraham Lincoln and his team somehow saved a Washington surrounded by enemy secessionists during the first twelve days of the Civil War—their fears, their mistakes, their scheming, their arguments, their triumphs. And at every point where your reaction will be, ‘How does he know that?’ you can turn to more than fifty pages of meticulous footnotes to find out. I’m in awe.”—Steven Brill, author of Tailspin and America’s Bitter Pill, creator of Court TV and The American Lawyer, and co-CEO of NewsGuard
“Written as only a reporter or war correspondent can write it, with vivid descriptions showing the art of audio-visual writing at its best. You can see the images without the need for pictures, and you can hear the sounds without the need for a radio or television. Silber has combined his reporting skills and editing skills in one heck of a historical book that will be read for generations to come.”—Samir Husni, founder and former director of the Magazine Innovation Center at the University of Mississippi