This is an impressively comprehensive account of what is arguably the most tumultuous time in American history. As an entire region of the country lay in ruin, an infant GOP recognized the precariousness of its position and went to great lengths to preserve its dominance in the federal government.
Leigh boldly treads into politically incorrect waters by suggesting that race was but one factor in an era marked by increasing strife among the economic classes and cronyism. Through carefully documented evidence, he shows how the Republican party feigned concern for black equality as a means to assume political power in the South and implement their political agenda, an agenda which primarily, if not solely, benefited the rich and connected Northern elite.
Perhaps what this book does most is explode the notion that the South "won" Reconstruction by successfully driving out the carpetbag Republicans and implementing discriminatory Jim Crow laws. Leigh deftly explains the nuances concerning racial views and barriers in the South, neither denying the general racism of Southerners(especially poor whites) nor solely blaming them for the outcome. He shows that there were just as many impoverished whites living hand to mouth as there were blacks, a condition that continued well into the 20th century. Injurious federal policies, from protective tariffs to lavish veterans' pensions, had the effect of further burdening poor Southerners, white and black, with taxation and rigging marketplace dynamics in favor of Northern monopolists.
The information in this book actually goes a long way in explaining current political and cultural dynamics. An urban yuppie would do well to read this to get a comprehensive understanding of the rural, "redneck" mentality that currently pervades the populist right. Alas, we live in an increasingly tribal world with nasty leaders that brazenly vilify demographics they're opposed to, whether they be the "deplorables" of blue-collar Trump supporters or the "snowflakes" of the left. Such appeals to understanding to those who wish only to see their side win, combined with a system that rewards such behavior, makes it an exercise in futility.