âThis is a marvelous expansion of the best memoir of a fighting soldier south of the Mason-Dixon Line we have.â âKen Burns, producer of the PBS documentary The Civil War
âAll of us have something to celebrate in this edition of Company Aytch with Samâs own revisions.â âRobert Hicks, author, The Widow of the South
""Long considered indispensible reading for any Civil War buff, the book's droll candor and sense of irony provide an unforgettable glimpse into the experienceâboth the drudgery and the extraordinaryâof the average Civil War soldier."" âThe History Channel's Daily History
âWatkinsâs revision and additions enhance and refine his story. Some of them are pointed, others hilarious, but they all add depth to one of the must-read soldier narratives.â âWilliam C. Davis, Director of the Virginia Center for Civil War Studies at Virginia Tech
""Historians, documentarians, and novelistsâfrom Ken Burns to Margaret Mitchellâall rely, for Civil War period detail, on the text of Company Aytch . . . this edition, revised according to Watkins's notes from the 1890s, includes many corrections and additions and should be considered the definitive text of the book."" âRalph Bowden, Chapter 16
""When it comes to books about the Civil War, many people agree wholeheartedly, Company Aytch is the best ever written."" âGenealogyBlog
""The Civil War memoir of Sam Watkins, veteran of every hard-fought battle of Company H, First Tennessee Volunteer Infantry, remains the premier source of the private's view of that colossal struggle. . . . This volume is an updated, well-editedâby his great-granddaughterârepublication of Watkins's original 1882 work. . . . No serirous student of the Civil War should be without a copy."" âRoanoke Times