Showing posts with label American Revolution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label American Revolution. Show all posts

Saturday, January 27, 2018

Ashes

Ashes by Laurie Halse Anderson, 298 pages

As the Revolutionary War rages on, Isabel and Curzon have narrowly escaped Valley Forge--but their relief is short-lived. Before long they are reported as runaways, and the awful Bellingham is determined to track them down. With purpose and faith, Isabel and Curzon march on, fiercely determined to find Isabel's little sister Ruth, who is enslaved in a Southern state--where bounty hunters are thick as flies. Heroism and heartbreak pave their path, but Isabel and Curzon won't stop until they reach Ruth, and then freedom, in this grand finale to the acclaimed New York Times bestselling trilogy from Laurie Halse Anderson.” This was a great finale.  Teens who like historical fiction should definitely read these books.

Friday, October 23, 2015

John Adams

Cover image for John Adams by David McCullough, 651 pages

John Adams had long been the forgotten Founder.  Always controversial, never wildly popular, defeated in a landslide in his 1800 Presidential reelection bid, he didn't write the Declaration of Independence, didn't fly a kite in a thunderstorm, didn't chop down a cherry tree.  Intellectuals remembered him as the progenitor of the dynasty that would include his son John Quincy and his great-grandson Henry, and conservatives reimagined him as an American Burke, but it was David McCullough who virtually single-handedly raised the public perception of Adams from a trivia question to his rightful place amongst the Founders.

McCullough writes with novelistic grace.  His focus is on the personalities of his subjects, rather than the interminable business of debate, diplomacy, and government - although this has the drawback of sometimes understating the difficulties and undervaluing the importance of such work.  It is emblematic of his approach that McCullough spends more time on a tour of English gardens undertaken by Jefferson and Adams in 1787 than on the drafting of the Declaration of Independence - the former brilliantly illuminates the characters of these two men and the nature of their highly significant, turbulent relationship, but the latter was obviously far more important as a single historical event, that is, the Declaration was a milestone in American and world history, but the personalities, feuds, and friendships of Jefferson and Adams would shape history in subtler but equally important ways.