The Last Letter: A Father's Struggle, a Daughter's Quest, and the Long Shadow of the HolocaustKaren Baum Gordon
Decisions of the Red River Campaign: The Fifteen Critical Decisions That Defined the OperationMichael S. Lang
Decisions at Perryville: The Twenty-Two Critical Decisions That Defined the BattleLawrence K. Peterson
In Memory of Self and Comrades: Thomas Wallace Colley's Recollections of Civil War Service in the 1st Virginia CavalryMichael K. Shaffer
Decisions of the 1862 Shenandoah Valley Campaign: The Sixteen Critical Decisions That Defined the OperationRobert Tanner
A Mere Kentucky of a Place: The Elkhorn Association and the Commonwealth's First BaptistsKeith Harper
New Fields of Adventure: The Writings of Lyman G. Bennett, Civil War Soldier and Topographical Engineer, 1861–1865M. Jane Johansson
To Contest with All the Powers of Darkness: New England Baptists, Religious Liberty, and New Political Landscapes, 1740–1833Jacob E. Hicks
The Civil War Memoir of a Boy from Baltimore: The Remembrance of George C. Maguire, Written in 1893Holly I. Powers
Whispering in the Daylight: The Children of Tony Alamo Christian Ministries and Their Journey to FreedomDebby Schriver
Anatomy of a Schism: How Clergywomen's Narratives Reinterpret the Fracturing of the Southern Baptist ConventionEileen Campbell-Reed
The Montgomery Bus Boycott and the Women Who Started It: The Memoir of Jo Ann Gibson RobinsonJo Ann Gibson Robinson
Contentious Unions: Black Baptist Schools and White Baptist Money in the Jim Crow SouthMary Beth Swetnam Mathews
The Hall of Fame for Great Americans: A Biography of Stanford White's Forgotten MemorialSheila Gerami
Decisions of the Galveston Campaigns: The Twenty-One Critical Decisions That Defined the OperationsEdward T. Cotham
Critical Connections: The University of Tennessee and Oak Ridge from the Dawn of the Atomic Age to the PresentLee Riedinger
Tennessee Tragedies: Natural, Technological, and Societal Disasters in the Volunteer StateAllen R. Coggins
Cornerstone of the Confederacy: Alexander Stephens and the Speech that Defined the Lost CauseKeith Hebert