Howard Mann’s remarks are right on the money. Let’s stop with the diplomatic gestures however, and get right to the point. Donald L. Gilmore’s book is unadulterated rubbish. It is revisionist history at it’s worst. His absurd exhortation that the Missouri guerrillas “were not ordinary men but members of the elite class of western Missouri,” is utter nonsense. Perhaps what he meant to say was some of the guerrillas came from elite families. Quantrill, Anderson, and Todd certainly did not spring from the upper crust of society. Those Missouri guerrillas who did in fact come from elite families probably had more in common with Vice President Dick Cheney than with Quantrill. Like the VP during the Vietnam War, the elite guerrillas seem to have had “other priorities.” I would think, that if they really cared about the war effort, they would have signed up for the Confederate Army. When a real Missouri elite, General Sterling Price, met Anderson for the first time, he was shocked and dismayed, and promptly sent Anderson away. Like most real Missouri aristocrats, Price wanted to maintain as much distance as possible from these reprobates. Gilmore’s work ranks with those who would have us believe there were legions of Black Confederates and that the South was right. Simply stated, Gilmore’s book does a great injustice to history.