Amid the giants of the age, we need to remember that a host of peripheral people left their own, often dubious mark on events. The career of Charles Cowlam makes for almost unbelievable reading. Liar, fantasist, con man, jailbird, tale-teller, Cowlam and his story throw a different and lurid light on the eras of the Civil War and Reconstruction. Kudos to Frank W. Garmon Jr. for tracing Cowlam's trail and dragging him into public view!"" - Mark Wahlgren Summers, author of The Ordeal of the Reunion: A New History of Reconstruction
""Colorful rogues were not limited to Victorian fiction in the 1800s. Real-life characters such as Loreta Velasquez, Charles Dunham, Sanford Conover, and more gained fame and infamy for their deceptions and illegal acts. No one was more bold than Charles Cowlam, whose poses and deceits invite fictionalization, but they were all true. Garmon's A Wonderful Career in Crime reveals Cowlam with impressive research and a deft hand at seeing through a lifelong criminal."" - William C. Davis, author of Inventing Loreta Velasquez: Confederate Soldier Impersonator, Media Celebrity, and Con Artist
""A Wonderful Career in Crime is a deeply researched and illuminating account of a quintessential nineteenth-century American flimflam artist, whose myriad scams brought him into contact with many of the century's major historical figures and developments."" - Elizabeth D. Leonard, author of Benjamin Franklin Butler: A Noisy, Fearless Life
""This engaging book recovers the remarkable life of a talented nineteenth-century grifter. Charles Cowlam won pardons from Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis, claimed both Union and Confederate military service, and ingratiated himself with a range of politicians, bureaucrats, and business leaders. His exploits not only entertain but also offer insight on the era's economic and political structures and practices."" - Gary W. Gallagher, author of The Union War