The Cause
$18.95
Title | Range | Discount |
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Trade Discount | 5 + | 25% |
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Description
— Editors’ Choice • — “60 Best Reads for Right Now” • — “50 Fall Books You Should Consider Reading” Masterly…. Underscore[s] that the signers failed to deal with some awfully big problems…. Deftly foreshadows all the issues that would complicate America’s trajectory and ends with a historical cliffhanger: Would the Republic survive? It did, but only when the Constitution became the embodiment of The Cause…. As Ellis points out, the word ‘democracy’ back then was more suggestive of mob rule than reasoned deliberation. [A] carefully wrought, highly engaging reality check on the elusive character of the American Revolution… Ellis, a winner of the Pulitzer Prize and a National Book Award for previous works, is sensitive to contested vocabularies… [He] knows that words always matter and that the Revolution wasn’t all glorious or miraculous. He regularly reminds us of what it wasn’t…. With its combined examination of tactics and atmospherics, is a serious (and seriously entertaining) book and a lively addition to the literature. It is told in the breezy manner that fans of the author have come to expect. All in all, it provides a clear and fair-minded assessment of men and women and issues that mattered at a time when everything mattered. comes across as a special gift, the book the author most wanted to write to the reader from the great scholar. Pulitzer Prize-winning and bestselling historian Joseph J. Ellis superbly captures the issues, personalities and events of the American Revolution… Using rigorous scholarship, Ellis offers vivid portraits of and penetrating insights about this period in history, while challenging our conventional understandings of it… This riveting, highly recommended book by one of America’s major historians will change how you see the American Revolution. [A] speedy retelling of the nation’s stumbling, fractured founding, through evocative profiles of British loyalists, slaves, Native Americans and soldiers uncertain of what was being founded. The colonists didn’t describe their war for independence as the American Revolution, Pulitzer winner Ellis ( ) points out in the preface to this richly detailed, multivoiced history. The term they used was “The Cause”—“a conveniently ambiguous label that provided a verbal canopy under which a diverse variety of political and regional persuasions could coexist.” Ellis skillfully charts those divergent interests…. Profiles of lesser-known figures including Continental Army soldier Joseph Plumb Martin and Mohawk chief Joseph Brant add depth and nuance to a familiar story. This expert account highlights the “improvisational” nature of America’s founding. With his characteristically graceful prose, Ellis offers a short, straightforward history of a critical decade in the nation’s youth…. [from] a master storyteller known for perceptive detailing. As is always the case with Ellis, he is brilliant at short takes—events, decisions, individuals…. True to his own skills at bringing people alive, Ellis also includes sympathetic mini-profiles of normal, unsung participants in the period’s fraught events: loyalists, women, Native Americans, Joseph Plum Martin (“the Zelig of the American Revolution”), and, perhaps the most captivating, Washington’s personal slave, Billy Lee…. It’s hard to imagine a better-told brief history of the key years of the American Revolution. Ellis’s witty style and astute analysis make this essential reading for historians and enthusiasts at all levels who want to disentangle the complex historiography of the American Revolution. Ruing Washington’s postwar hesitance to set an example by freeing his slaves, Ellis underscores the moral failings and deferrals that were then deemed necessary to ensure political unity. In all, a fresh and astute analysis of the American Revolution. US
Additional information
Weight | 1 oz |
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Dimensions | 1 × 6 × 8 in |