“[A] wide-ranging and nuanced group portrait of the Founding Fathers” by a Pulitzer Prize-winner (The New Yorker). Revolutionaries makes us think afresh about how the country came to be, and why the idea of America endures. In the early 1770s, the men who invented America were living quiet, provincial lives in the rustic backwaters of the New World, devoted to family and the private pursuit of wealth and happiness. None set out to become “revolutionary.” But when events in Boston escalated, they found themselves thrust into a crisis that moved quickly from protest to war. In Revolutionaries, a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian shows how the private lives of these men were suddenly transformed into public careers–how Washington became a strategist, Franklin a pioneering cultural diplomat, Madison a sophisticated constitutional thinker, and Hamilton a brilliant policymaker. From the Boston Tea Party to the First Continental Congress, from Trenton to Valley Forge, from the ratification of the Constitution to the disputes that led to our two-party system, Rakove explores the competing views of politics, war, diplomacy, and society that shaped our nation. We see the founders before they were fully formed leaders, as ordinary men who became extraordinary, altered by history.
Revolutionaries: A New History of the Invention of America
$16.95
This book provides an in-depth historical account of the American Revolution and the founding fathers.
Additional information
Weight | 0.408 lbs |
---|---|
Dimensions | 13.3 × 2.5 × 20.3 in |
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.