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John Adams
David McCullough
Simon & Schuster
, 2008 - 768 pages
average customer review:
based on 778 reviews
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highly recommended
Finally Giving the Devil His Due
Much like his book on President Truman, Mr. McCullough has taken a frequently maligned historical figure and helped to burnish his place in history. Many of the books I have read about other great figures from that era always seemed to minimize
John
Adams
contributions. Mr. McCullough is a gifted historian who makes all his subject matters come to life. The author shows how little has changed since the founding of our country when it comes to brilliant individuals willing to compromise their morals in the pursuit of winning in the political arena. It is a balanced, thought-provoking and highly entertaining biography. Well-worth reading even though the weight of this tome made my wrists sore.
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What an amazing book.
This work by DAVID MCCULLOUGH is no less than genius. DAVID MCCULLOUGH won the Pulitzer prize for this book. We are taught in school that
John
Adams
was present during the American Revolution but to what extent? Simply amazing.
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Superb biography of a fascinating (and generally overlooked) individual.
I have been fascinated by
John
Adams
ever since I first saw the movie "1776". Granted, I understand that William Daniels' portrayal had a great deal of dramatization for the sake of making a good story coloring it, but it always seemed to me that there was a fair amount of truth undergirding it as well. This book reinforces that opinion; I could frequently hear with my mind's ear Daniels' acerbic voice speaking the lines attributed to Adams. Granted, I am not a professional historian, so McCullough could easily have made much of this story up out of whole cloth and I'd have no way of detecting the deceit, but it has the feel of a thoroughly researched, carefully accurate tale. But more importantly, it is (to my mind, at least) reasonably well-balanced. Certainly, McCullough has tremendous respect and affection for his subject; most biographers do. But he doesn't fall into the trap that so many biographers fall into of omitting or glossing over the flaws in his subject. It is certainly possible that someone less well-inclined toward Adams might feel that he has minimized them, but no one can reasonably accuse him of ignoring them; Adams is portrayed in a very human light, and no one can read this book and feel that they saw an airbrushed picture of a perfect statesman. The ability to show a subject flaws and all while still invoking sympahy and respect is the mark of a truly fine biographer; McCullough does that.
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John Adams finally gets the respect/acknowledgement he deserves
John
Adams
' life encompasses a huge arc - he lived longer than any president. Crucial to the story as it was to history is the relationship between Adams and Jefferson born opposites - but alike in their devotion to their country. Amazingly and incredibly they died on the same day - their day of days - July 4, 1826. This is history on a grand scale - a book about politics and war and social issues, but also about human nature, love, religious faith, virtue, ambition, friendship and betrayal and the far-reaching consequences of noble ideas. Above all, John Adams is an enthralling, often surprising story of one of the most important and fascinating Americans who ever lived. John Adams is, so far, my favorite book this year.
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Very good biography of a lesser-known Founding Father
Everyone knows Neil Armstrong was the first man to walk on the moon, but fewer people know Buzz Aldrin was second. Sir Edmund Hillary is famous for being the first to scale Mt. Everest, nobody knows Tenzig Norgay was second. It's the same for presidents. George Washington was the first president, and is rightly the most prominent Founding Father. Others, like Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson are on coins, monuments, and schools.
John
Adams
played a key role in America's early years, but his biography isn't as familiar.
David McCullough's biography does a very good job of rectifying that wrong with this cradle-to-grave biography. Using the voluminous personal correspondance of Adams, Abigail Adams, and friends and family, McCullough can do a nice job of telling Adams' story. There's a few reasons why I give it four stars instead of five. I'd have preferred it if Adams' formation of a patriot was explained. It's like there were rumblings of revolution, and Adams signed right up. Why? Not every colonist did. In addition, Adams talkable nature is cited, but how did he get so influential in the Continental Congress? His growing influence is stated as fact in the book, but it would have been nice to explain why. Skipping forward a few years, my other complaint is how the power struggle between Hamilton and Adams was described. It's not quite clear how Hamilton thwarted Adams, or why. McCullough goes more into Jefferson and Adams' relationship, even though they spent much of Adams presidency not talking.
These few complaints besides, it's an engaging book, and I recommend it for anyone interested in a popular Revolutionary-era history.
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