
The
Alamo Reader: A Study in History
Edited by Todd Hansen
837
pages, illustrated, hardcover: $36.95
ISBN
0-8117-0060-7
Reviewed
by Tim Todish
My
recent MUZZLELOADER article, “The Alamo: Deserving of Being Noted”
(May/June 2004), was designed to help those who yearned for more information
after seeing the then-newly released movie, The Alamo, directed by John
Lee Hancock. In that article I attempted to point readers toward a variety of
reliable and readily available books on the Alamo and the Texas Revolution.
There is, of necessity, a significant lag time between when an article is
written and when it is finally published. During this time lag for my Alamo
article, an excellent new title appeared that I feel should be brought to
readers’ attention.
Todd
Hansen’s The Alamo Reader is one of the finest compilations of primary
source material relating to the Alamo that has ever been published. Organized
into sections—Source inside the Alamo, Sources in the Mexican Camp, Sources
from the Vicinity, Other Primary Sources and Later Sources—the book presents
letters, newspaper accounts and other documents from all sides of the conflict.
It also contains a number of carefully chosen illustrations, such as various
period sketches of the Alamo’s fortifications. The author includes his own
well-reasoned commentary, but the real strength of the book lies in the large
number of primary sources that are presented. These documents are often
contradictory, and readers are allowed to come to their own conclusions about
their veracity.
The
Alamo Reader is not a book for everyone. There are better titles for those
who simply desire a clean and flowing narrative of the historic events
surrounding the Alamo. However, for those who like to dig into the actual
sources themselves and make up their own minds about the inevitable
controversies, Todd Hansen’s book is an absolute must.
The
Alamo Reader was published by Stackpole Books and is available through major
retailers.