by  Jack C. Mason
                 Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 2009.  Pp. xi, 234. 
                 Illus, maps, notes, biblio, index.  $29.95.  ISBN: 0809329476
                
	  
               
  
    A very fine commander, the virtually forgotten Civil War general Israel B. Richardson had to wait nearly 150 years 
     for a biographer
     after he died of wounds incurred at 
    Antietam
    .  
  
  
    In Until Antietam, Mason, who is an instructor at the Command and General Staff College, draws upon a recently uncovered cache of the general's letters, as well as other archival materials, to throw light on the life and service this very overlooked commander. A West Pointer (1841), 
    Richardson
     served with distinction on the frontier, in 
    Florida
     , and in 
    Mexico
     , before resigning from the Army in the mid-1850s to take up farming. When the Civil War broke out, he answered the call, and rose from leading a regiment to division command in about a years by dint of tactical skill and an aggressive "Rough and Ready" approach to command. The book includes quite a number of impressive battle pieces, plus a good deal of insight into the character and life of the American volunteer during the Civil War. 
  
  
    Although the book does not give us much of a look at 
    Richardson
    's personal life, and Mason is perhaps a bit too enthusiastic about his subject, Until Antietam is a good book, and a valuable read for anyone interested in the Civil War, especially in the East, or in military leadership.