Across two capacious volumes, The War with Mexico reconstructs the 1846-1848 conflict from its tangled diplomatic origins to the fall of Mexico City, balancing battlefield narrative with scrutiny of policy and ideology. Justin Harvey Smith traces the Taylor and Scott campaigns, the boundary dispute, Santa Anna's shifting ascendancy, and the fractious Mexican polity, while unpacking Polk's expansionist calculus. Lucid, dispassionate prose is paired with exhaustive documentation-maps, appendices, and copious notes-typical of Progressive-era synthesis yet unusually binational, drawing deeply on Mexican archives to correct triumphalist or partisan accounts. Smith, a meticulous independent scholar with years of experience in scholarly publishing, had honed his archival craft in earlier studies of the Revolutionary invasion of Canada. For this project-crowned with the 1920 Pulitzer Prize in History-he walked Mexican battlefields, mined the Archivo General de la Nación and U.S. state papers, and corresponded across borders, investments that ground his comparative judgments and his sensitivity to Mexican political and social contexts. Indispensable for students of U.S.-Mexican relations, military strategy, and Manifest Destiny's ideology, this work rewards both specialists and general readers. For seminar or personal study, Smith offers a judicious synthesis-morally alert, empirically rich-that remains a reliable guide to North America's most consequential interstate war. Quickie Classics summarizes timeless works with precision, preserving the author's voice and keeping the prose clear, fast, and readable-distilled, never diluted. Enriched Edition extras: Introduction · Synopsis · Historical Context · Brief Analysis · 4 Reflection Q&As · Editorial Footnotes.
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