The book was critically acclaimed. The Washington Post said that the book "remains the best single popular account of Washington during the great convulsion of the Civil War" and that it was "vividly written, with hundreds of cameo portraits, from President Lincoln to the humblest citizen."[4]The New Republic expressed that Leech "offers a smart and witty account of wartime Washington's transformation from an administrative backwater to the locus of renewed federal power" and called the book an "encyclopedic portrait" and a "first-rate chronicle of how the political elites handled the war".[5]
Awards
Reveille in Washington received the Pulitzer Prize for History in 1942 and Leech became the first woman to win that prize. [1]
^"New in Paperback". www.washingtonpost.com. The Washington Post. 19 April 1986. Retrieved 7 March 2024. Published in 1941, this remains the best single popular account of Washington during the great convulsion of the Civil War. Vividly written, with hundreds of cameo portraits, from President Lincoln to the humblest citizen, the book won its author a Pulitzer Prize.
^Megan Buskey (4 October 2011). "War and the City". www.newrepublic.com. The New Republic. Retrieved 7 March 2024. Leech, who published three novels before this work of history appeared in 1941, offers a smart and witty account of wartime Washington's transformation from an administrative backwater to the locus of renewed federal power. This encyclopedic portrait won Leech, who died in 1974, her first of two Pulitzer Prizes for history...Reveille in Washington could stand on its own as a first-rate chronicle of how the political elites handled the war.