A graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chris J. Hartley is the author of several magazine articles and three books: The Lost Soldier: The Ordeal of a World War II GI From the Home Front to the Huertgen Forest; Stoneman’s Raid, 1865; and Stuart’s Tarheels: James B. Gordon and His North Carolina Cavalry. His writing has garnered several awards, including the Willie Parker Peace Prize from the North Carolina Society of Historians and a Preservation Education and Publication Award from The Historic Salisbury Foundation. Hartley is a frequent speaker and battlefield tour guide. He and his wife Laurie have two daughters and reside in Pfafftown, North Carolina.
""Daniel Harvey Hill was considered by some to be General Lee's best division commander and one of the most difficult officers to deal with. Chris Hartley does a fantastic job breathing life into the real Hill, from his successes on the battlefield to his wranglings with his superiors. This is an essential addition to Civil War historiography.""--Michael C. Hardy, author of Feeding Lee's Army of Northern Virginia ""Unlike most Civil War books published these days, here is something that is both original and essential. How a general of Hill's stature escaped a full modern treatment until now is hard to understand. A lifetime spent embroiled in controversy makes Hill's story a reader's delight. This is a fine biography of an important man, skillfully executed by an extremely able historian.""--Robert E. L. Krick, author of The Battle of Gaines's Mill ""Chris Hartley's biography of Confederate General D. H. Hill is a welcome and long-overdue addition to the study of the Civil War. The result of his superb research and gifted writing is a wonderfully crafted story that does not shy away from the wartime controversies that often embroiled Hill. Never one to remain silent, Hill's sharp tongue often found him at odds with superiors like Robert E. Lee and Braxton Bragg. Despite the web of trouble that trapped the fiery general, Hill was devoted to the Confederate cause, as exemplified by his warrior spirit from Big Bethel to Bentonville. Confederate General D. H. Hill: A Military Biography is a must-read.""--Wade Sokolosky (Col., U.S. Army, ret.), co-author of ""To Prepare for Sherman's Coming"" The Battle of Wise's Forks, March 1865