CliffsNotes on

The Killer Angels

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Michael Shaara Biography

Early Years and Education
Early Work
Final Years

About The Killer Angels

Summary and Analysis by Chapter

Foreword
Monday, June 29, 1863 — 1. The Spy
Monday, June 29, 1863 — 2. Chamberlain
Monday, June 29, 1863 — 3. Buford
Monday, June 29, 1863 — 4. Longstreet
Wednesday, July 1, 1863 — 1. Lee
Wednesday, July 1, 1863 — 2. Buford
Wednesday, July 1, 1863 — 3. Lee
Wednesday, July 1, 1863 — 4. Chamberlain
Wednesday, July 1, 1863 — 5. Longstreet
Wednesday, July 1, 1863 — 6. Lee
Wednesday, July 1, 1863 — 7. Buford
Thursday, July 2, 1863 — 1. Fremantle
Thursday, July 2, 1863 — 2. Chamberlain
Thursday, July 2, 1863 — 3. Longstreet
Thursday, July 2, 1863 — 4. Chamberlain
Thursday, July 2, 1863 — 5. Longstreet
Thursday, July 2, 1863 — 6. Lee
Friday, July 3, 1863 — 1. Chamberlain
Friday, July 3, 1863 — 2. Longstreet
Friday, July 3, 1863 — 3. Chamberlain
Friday, July 3, 1863 — 4. Armistead
Friday, July 3, 1863 — 5. Longstreet
Friday, July 3, 1863 — 6. Chamberlain
Afterword

Character List

Character Map

Character Analysis

Robert E. Lee
James Longstreet
Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain
John Buford

Critical Essays

The Killer Angels — History or Novel?
The Battle of Gettysburg — the Civilian Experience
Good versus Evil; Man versus Challenge
Questions as Theme
Emotions/Beliefs
The Lee versus Longstreet Battle Strategy Conflict

Study and Homework Help

Full Glossary for The Killer Angels
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Summary and Analysis by Chapter

Wednesday, July 1, 1863 — 2. Buford

The battle begins, seen from Buford's side. The attack comes at dawn near Seminary Ridge but is short-lived. The Rebels try again and again, but Buford's men repel them. Buford expects his opposing commander will probe his line to define his position and strength, but that doesn't happen. They try to flank Buford's men by coming around through an unfinished railroad trench, but Buford's men hold.

There is a quiet period as the Rebels regroup. Buford realizes that by the afternoon, all of the Army of Northern Virginia will be there and hit them with everything they've got. Buford rearranges the placement of his men to make it look like he has more men than he does, trying to buy time for Reynolds and the Union infantry to get to Gettysburg.

Finally, the attack starts. Buford stays down in the line, adjusting his men and watching. They repulse Rebel breakthroughs, though the Union line is wavering. Back in the seminary cupola, Buford sees thousands of Rebel troops coming from the west, death and destruction on the field in front of him, and to the rear — Reynolds riding alone up the road.

Reynolds assesses things, immediately sees the need for high ground and sees what Buford has achieved. Reynolds hurries his men into place, relieving Buford and his men. The enemy is unaware fresh troops are about to hit them. Reynolds sends messengers to Meade and his commanders and then warns civilians to stay clear. The attack starts, and within minutes, Reynolds is dead on the ground.


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