BEAU CLELAND is an assistant professor of history at the University of Calgary and a research fellow at the Centre for Military, Strategic, and Security Studies, where he teaches and researches about pirates, smugglers, raiders, and scoundrels and how they shaped the history of North America and beyond. He served as an artillery officer in the U.S. Army, with combat duty in Afghanistan and Iraq, and before that he played mediocre football at Georgia Tech. He lives in Calgary, Alberta, with his wife and a bewildering array of children, dogs, and cats.
With its groundbreaking focus on the expansive networks established between the Confederacy and the British empire in the New World (Canada, Bermuda, Nassau, and the Bahamas), Between King Cotton and Queen Victoria deepens our understanding of the U.S. Civil War era. It is a distinguished addition to the recent scholarship examining the transnational dimensions of the 1860s crisis of the Americas. -- Patrick Kelly * Associate Professor Emeritus, University of Texas at San Antonio * Cleland is the first historian to shine a bright light on the British Empire in the American hemisphere and analyze its significance to the evolution of CSA foreign relations and covert operations. This is a brilliant and novel addition to the international history of the American Civil War. -- Don H. Doyle * McCausland Professor of History Emeritus, author of The Cause of All Nations and The Age of Reconstruction *