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From the Hardcover edition.
In this excellent biography, veteran historian White emphasizes that Lincoln was our most likable major president, lacking Washington's aloofness and the deviousness of FDR and Jefferson. Many young men from the frontier overcame the handicaps of poverty and minimal education, but, White says, Lincoln did better than most, becoming floor leader in the Illinois legislature by age 30 and a prosperous lawyer. Contrary to the common view that Lincoln was a dark-horse for the 1860 presidential nomination after a single, undistinguished term in the House of Representatives, White stresses that Lincoln was an experienced politician, popular throughout Illinois, and known to national leaders. Few Republicans thought they had chosen badly. The author makes good use of Lincoln's voluminous private papers and those of his contemporaries to paint a vivid picture of Lincoln's thoughts as he matured and then guided the nation through the four worst years of its existence. White knows his subject cold and writes lucid prose, so readers choosing this as their Lincoln bicentennial reading will not go wrong. Illus., maps, photos.
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You may have heard Chris Matthews effusing about how that milestone has been given fresh pizzazz by the election of another lanky enigma from Illinois. Not least because B. Obama owes A. Lincoln in more than one sense, I'm wishing him the best. So far as his 19th-century role model goes, however, it's tempting to ignore the punctuation mark and think of White's A. Lincoln as A Lincoln instead.
That's because, as White himself concedes, defining "the" Lincoln has stayed above any would-be interpreter's pay grade since the day he was assassinated. Call it our bum luck William Shakespeare not only lived in the wrong country but died a few centuries too early to take a crack at the job.
To understand why, consider the distance between the two representations of White's subject most familiar to Americans. First comes the Abe on the humble penny, an unpretentious co-citizen we've seen fit to commemorate on the commonest of U.S. coins. It might not still be in circulation if the image weren't so democratically iconic.
The other, though, is the Lincoln enthroned in shadows in the most moving of our capital's memorials. Magnificent, somehow terrible -- and in his isolation, unmistakably unique -- he's also unfathomable. No other statue in Washington, D.C., makes visitors so conscious of looking up at it, one reason the place's usual hush often has underpinnings of disquiet.
What makes him such an uncanny figure in our history is that for once his compatriots can't make life easy on themselves by saying that the truth must lie between the two extremes. In fact, it encompasses them both. The cracker-barrel Lincoln did exist, not always to his contemporaries' delight. One brutal cartoon during his presidency -- and there were many of those -- had him saying, "That reminds me of a funny story," as he contemplated the Civil War's rising death toll. But his Mark Twain side masked a calm skill in manipulating other people's goals and motives to his own ends that would have impressed Machiavelli.
Nor is that all, since the innermost Lincoln would have been at home -- and felt at home, whether we care to dwell on it or not -- in the world of Poe and Melville. It's not just that his prose's somber cadences make him their literary equal. At his most mysterious -- or most "fundamental and astounding," if you like -- our Honest Abe was also Honest Ahab, pursuing his one overwhelming goal at all costs: "Until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another drawn with the sword," to quote the Second Inaugural again. If Poe had been elected president in his place -- and don't blink, since they were born all of three weeks apart -- the author of "The Raven" couldn't have come up with a malediction more frightening.
In Lincoln's case, like Ahab's, the cost included his own martyrdom. Unlike the Pequod's maniacal master, though, he died knowing that he'd won, most likely with secular sainthood included in the bargain. And call us Moby-Dick, since we were the soiled whale he'd saved instead of killing it: something also in his power, as he knew. Those were the stakes.
As you may not be shocked to hear, the hero of A. Lincoln has no streaks of alarming Poe-like morbidity or Melvillian obsessiveness to speak of. Nor does Machiavellian guile rate more than a hasty nod or two. Though it's absorbing and clearly the product of devoted (meaning, I'm afraid, both assiduous and blinkered) research, White's version stays inside the David McCullough school of patriotic biography. Said school's unstated rule is that on no account must America's giants ever disturb us.
Our past's great men do get granted a few quiddities, since they wouldn't hold our interest if they were all bonnet and no bee. They're even praised for their pleasantly moth-eaten -- that is, inconsequential to modern readers -- intellectual complexity. By the final curtain, though, they always stand revealed as selfless agents in a great project: the creation or, by Lincoln's time, the preservation of a nation.
Not only is the project's grandeur, as we used to say, self-evident. Out of bounds is any suggestion that our forefathers were more than intermittently goaded (and never primarily, of course) by the same impulses as their counterparts in wicked Europe all through history. You know: an itch for fame, a hunger for power, a craving to validate their outsized sense of their own capacities on the biggest possible stage. As Lyndon Johnson learned to his sorrow, believing that great good can come from schemers is anathema to our DNA.
No wonder two of the most revealing comments on Lincoln by admirers who knew him well appear nowhere in White's text. Both make dandy correctives to secular sainthood, desentimentalizing Lincoln without debunking him. Here's William Herndon, his Springfield law partner and posthumous biographer: "His ambition was a little engine that knew no rest." And here's his White House secretary, John Hay: "No great man is ever modest. It was his intellectual arrogance and unconscious assumption of superiority that men like Chase and Sumner could never forgive."
Chase was Salmon P. Chase, the Treasury secretary Lincoln later packed off to the Supreme Court. Sumner was haughty Charles Sumner of Massachusetts, the Senate's leading abolitionist. What they had in common with the president who outmaneuvered them both was that all three were career politicians. The difference was that Lincoln was a peerless one: "cold and deliberate, reflective and brilliant," in Gore Vidal's -- favorable, understand -- characterization.
Granted, at one level that assessment suggests how much Vidal, no less than the mawkish eulogists he's rebuking, began his search for Lincoln's best qualities by looking in the mirror. But with the enormously touching exception of "Father Abraham's" leniency to the Union deserters whose death sentences he so often commuted, it would be hard to cite a single important presidential decision Lincoln made based on sentiment.
The truth is, if he'd been wrong instead of supremely right about all the important things -- in other words, if he'd had Jefferson Davis's job, not an impossible scenario; we're just lucky the Lincolns chose to migrate north from Kentucky soon after Abe's birth, while the Davises opted for Dixie -- we'd remember him as diabolical. No other White House occupant equals him in caginess, tenacity, keen intuition of the forces in play or acute sense of what the traffic will bear.
The best evidence is the Emancipation Proclamation, justly remembered as a mighty step forward in making good on our ideals. Yet in everything from its timing to its hedged application only to the Confederate states, not to mention the devious military-necessity pretext that let Lincoln claim he was acting in his role as commander in chief, it was also a masterstroke of bald-faced opportunism. That's not a quality we're used to praising in our oddly Ahab-bearded demigod.
Predictably, White does genuflect once or twice to Lincoln's "political genius." So long as the term's meaning stays cloudy, it's safely part of the legend. But White doesn't show much interest in elucidating A.'s M.O., which it isn't altogether clear he even understands. We're told more than once that the secret of the pre-presidential Lincoln's effectiveness as a public speaker was his supposedly thoughtful readiness "to engage in the hard task of examining an opponent's arguments fully and fairly...his ability to attribute the best motives to those who were his opponents."
All this is news to me. What White doesn't seem to grasp is that the rhetorical tactic Lincoln is employing in every example we're given is that of Julius Caesar's Mark Anthony: "For Brutus is an honorable man," and so on. Not only was he steeped in Shakespeare, but it plainly wasn't mere leisure reading.
The larger point that's gone MIA in A. Lincoln is the degree to which the sublime achievements for which we venerate Lincoln were made possible only by the canniness and even ruthlessness of Honest Ahab's political gifts. Instead, White goes the old-fashioned hymnal route by hailing Lincoln's "moral integrity" as "the strong trunk from which all the branches of his life grew," so help me. Such corn is still less inane than his claim that "Lincoln is the president who laughs with us," a fortunately undeveloped line of thinking that had me planning to greet John Wilkes Booth with open arms and a sob of frenzied gratitude.
The problem with singling out moral integrity as Lincoln's strong suit is that, in itself, it was hardly an outstanding quality at the time. Countless upright Unionists and abolitionists shared his principles, and plenty of them did so not only with considerable eloquence but more zeal than he ever allowed himself to display. None of them had anything as subtle as his sense of the ripe moment or ability to reframe an issue for maximum leverage -- culminating, of course, in the Gettysburg Address's majestically sneaky substitution of the Declaration of Independence for the Constitution as American holy writ. Abolitionists who faulted Lincoln for insufficient radicalism never realized they were noisy men comparing themselves to a horse whisperer.
White, though, has other priorities. They're signaled up front by his allusion to Lincoln's "spiritual odyssey," which 500-odd pages later has become a full-blown "religious pilgrimage." That's the propagandist rather than the scholar in him speaking, since Lincoln's religious skepticism before he entered politics is so well documented that even Phyllis Schafly couldn't ignore it.
Even the mounting references to "God" and "the Almighty" in his wartime speeches -- as well as one private note found after his death, which White naturally prizes as the smoking-incense proof of A.'s fealty -- don't place him in the bosom of conventional Christianity. Right up to the end, his unfailingly gloomy "Almighty," whose most useful role as a foil is that He's always taking matters out of Lincoln's hands, sounds a lot like what 18th-century deists called Providence and Greeks and Romans called the Fates.
Anyhow, two things should always be kept in mind when evaluating Lincoln's sayings and writings. One is his audience; the other, his purpose. We'll never be able to guess his intentions for either when it came to the manuscript of Infidelity, a youthful refutation of Christian dogma his far-sighted employer at the time promptly burned. (White hurries past the episode.) But by 1858 if not much earlier, Lincoln more than understood a not quite self-evident truth: "Public sentiment is everything. With public sentiment, nothing can fail; without it nothing can succeed. Consequently, he who moulds sentiment, goes deeper than he who enacts statutes or pronounces decisions."
White quotes that analysis without pausing to reflect that anyone capable of such a perception is unlikely to set too high a value on unadorned candor. Not even while jotting down notes to himself in a White House sitting room, at least if you ask me. Pen to paper is the decisive ingredient here.
At a workaday level, White does a lot of things well. One major virtue is a well-organized narrative that keeps us appraised of the big-picture stuff -- the Dred Scott case, the Republican party's emergence -- without losing track of Lincoln's progress. Future key players in his career are introduced in just enough depth to ensure we'll remember them down the road.
White also has an eye for vivifying detail, something David Herbert Donald's otherwise superior 1995 Lincoln -- still the benchmark for modern biographies of A. -- too often lacked. Since we always picture Lincoln frock-coated, his 1848 appearance "in a long linen duster" at a Whig rally in Worcester, Massachusetts, jolts us into recalling that then Illinois still qualified as the frontier.
A decade later, when Lincoln debates Stephen Douglas, White is at his best. He animates the Great Waxworks Moment we know from so many textbooks by concentrating on the specifics of their encounters: the variations in local attitudes toward slavery at each stop, the debaters' relative state of exhaustion. As he says, "In the 1850s, in rural and small towns across Illinois, politics was often the only show in town." He brings that out by giving us what amounts to a good job of ex post facto sportswriting.
A. Lincoln has other nice touches, including the cross-cutting between Lincoln's and Jefferson Davis's train journeys to their respective inaugurals. It's not on a par with the grander contrast between them that opens Shelby Foote's monumental The Civil War, but it's effective. Even more so is White's use of Frederick Douglass as a sort of instant commentator on each stage of A.'s frustratingly slow -- to Douglass, anyhow -- public evolution from Unionist to Great Emancipator. In hindsight, Lincoln's caution looks expertly modulated. But Douglass's frequently dismayed opinion of his pokiness can't be gainsaid.
All the same, White's limitations get more obvious once A. is in the White House. His account of how the Emancipation Proclamation came to be pulls out all the stops: the midnight oil, the hesitations, the brooding. But he never brings up Lincoln's pressing tactical motive -- the need to forestall France and Britain, both anti-slavery but craving southern cotton, from recognizing the Confederacy.
In general, foreign affairs stay just that to White. Even Mexico, then occupied by Napoleon III's glum troops, is largely off his radar. Still, his provincial bias is unlikely to bother American readers much; they mostly share it, after all. Far more annoying is the way his determination to give us a Father Knows Best Lincoln includes attributing likable human frailties to him that he didn't in fact possess.
One bizarre example is White's treatment of a minor episode in Lincoln's presidency: his decision to sack his first secretary of war, the problematic Simon Cameron. In fretful tones, White wonders whether A. took too long to remove him. Then he sagaciously informs us that "Lincoln's loyalty was a strong character trait that sometimes overrode his judgment."
In this case -- and White cites no others -- that's nonsense. Lincoln had no personal or even professional ties to Cameron, who'd been included in the Cabinet out of expediency. (Pennsylvania needed a plum.) Once he'd turned out to be more trouble than he was worth, his boss delayed removing him only until he hit on a solution that would placate Cameron's partisans -- to wit, naming him ambassador to Russia. So far as I can tell, the humanizing element White introduces here is a concoction.
Making the passage even more noteworthy is its contrast with A. Lincoln's reticent handling of two men who, unlike Cameron, were genuinely close to Lincoln -- but who, for different reasons, don't fit White's pious agenda. During William Herndon's two decades as Lincoln's law partner, they talked about everything under the sun. That's why Herndon's Lincoln is an unparalleled source of opinionated observations that are based all the same on an intimate acquaintance with the pre–White House Lincoln's actual words and behavior in unguarded circumstances.
The drawback for White is that Herndon often gives us a Lincoln too gamy to be reproduced in marble -- a Lincoln, for instance, who apparently confided to Herndon that he'd caught a case of the clap in his bachelor days. All this plainly won't do, and since White can't dissect the relationship without getting into dangerous shoals, he downgrades and marginalizes Herndon instead.
The other Lincoln intimate whose important but indeterminate role in his life goes ostentatiously unexamined is Joshua Speed, with whom A. not only shared quarters before his marriage but -- famously, to gay scholars on the trail of Lincoln's sexuality -- a bed. Whatever the nature of their emotional bond, which stands out even on the very short list of Lincoln's close friendships, Speed meant enough to Lincoln that, unlike Herndon, he was offered several government appointments once A. was in office. This would actually give White some backup for the claim he doesn't substantiate otherwise about Lincoln's loyalty sometimes overriding his judgment.
Want to guess why he doesn't use it? It would have been one thing for him to sift the murky but very enjoyable evidence that Speed was the love of A.'s life and decide it's inconclusive, which it is. What's indefensible is White's refusal to so much as tip off his readers that any ambiguity exists when even coy Carl Sandburg, back in euphemistic 1926, noted "a streak of lavender" in the relationship. Once again, our priggish biographer isn't acting as a scholar but a propagandist.
As a citizen, White has as much right as any of us to a Lincoln he can call his own, I suppose. Some of you may like Gay Abe; me, I'm fond of Honest Ahab. But A. Lincoln is one more proof that the biography that can accommodate every last one of them -- "with malice toward none, with charity for all," you could say -- will probably never be written, which may be A.'s real monument. Personally, my only objection to the Lincoln Memorial is that it's much too small. --Tom Carson
A two-time National Magazine Award winner during his stint as Esquire's "Screen" columnist, Tom Carson is currently a columnist at GQ and a regular book reviewer for Los Angeles Magazine, where his work has won the CRMA award for criticism. He is the author of Gilligan's Wake (2003), a novel.
From the Hardcover edition.
List of Maps
Cast of Characters
Ch. 1 A. Lincoln and the Promise of America 3
Ch. 2 Undistinguished Families: 1809-16 7
Ch. 3 Persistent in Learning: 1816-30 23
Ch. 4 Rendering Myself Worthy of Their Esteem: 1831-34 43
Ch. 5 The Whole People of Sangamon: 1834-37 61
Ch. 6 Without Contemplating Consequences: 1837-42 79
Ch. 7 A Matter of Profound Wonder: 1831-42 99
Ch. 8 The Truth Is, I Would Like to Go Very Much: 1843-46 119
Ch. 9 My Best Impression of the Truth: 1847-49 139
Ch. 10 As a Peacemaker the Lawyer Has a Superior Opportunity: 1849-52 167
Ch. 11 Let No One Be Deceived: 1852-56 187
Ch. 12 A House Divided: 1856-58 223
Ch. 13 The Eternal Struggle Between These Two Principles: 1858 257
Ch. 14 The Taste Is in My Mouth, a Little: 1858-60 291
Ch. 15 Justice and Fairness to All: May 1860-November 1860 331
Ch. 16 An Humble Instrument in the Hands of the Almighty: November 1860-February 1861 349
Ch. 17 We Must Not Be Enemies: February 1861-April 1861 381
Ch. 18 A People's Contest: April 1861-July 1861 411
Ch. 19 The Bottom Is Out of the Tub: July 1861-January 1862 437
Ch. 20 We Are Coming, Father Abraham: January 1862-July 1862 467
Ch. 21 We Must Think Anew: July 1862- December 1862 495
Ch. 22 What will the Country Say? January 1863-May 1863 531
Ch. 23 You Say You Will Not Fight to Free Negroes: May 1863-September 1863 563
Ch. 24 A New Birth of Freedom: September 1863-March 1864 591
Ch. 25 The will of God Prevails: March 1864-November 1864 617
Ch. 26 With Malice Toward None, with Charity for All: December 1864-April 1865 647
Acknowledgments677
Notes 681
Selected Bibliography 745
Illustration Credits 765
Index 769
1. What characteristics of the young Lincoln stood out to his boyhood friends in Indiana?
2. Beginning with Lincoln’s announcement of his candidacy for state office in 1832, what qualities marked his four terms in the Illinois State Legislature?
3. In Lincoln’s single term in Congress why and how did he criticize President James Polk’s policies in the Mexican-American War?
4. How would you characterize Lincoln’s self-understanding as a lawyer in the years 1849-1854?
5. Why did Lincoln reemerge into politics in 1854 and what is new about his political message and style?
6. It has been suggested that Lincoln won the debates with Stephen Douglas in 1858. What are the bases of this claim?
pmtm
Posted January 25, 2009
The first reader needs to read other than "lost cause" books. Apparently he did not even note what James McPherson's review refers to as Lincoln's changing views on race. Lincoln HAD a plan for peaceful emancipation (immediate curtailing of slavery's extension with gradual and compensated emancipation) but the South spurned it. The war may have started over secession but secession itself came because, as even the Confederate VP later said, the Confederacy was built upon the foundation of slavery (which Southern leaders even favored expanding by war with our Latin or Carribean neighbors (as with the war with Mexico). SO, if the south had abided by Lincoln's election, and agreed to his platform, slavery WOULD have died peacefully and 620,000 Americans would not have died horribly.
As for White's book, I think it is not as balanced as Donald's and not as interesting as Alan Guelzo's (the best one-volume). Exactly what McPherson thought was the book's strength, analysis of Lincoln's writings, makes it sacrifice attention to the civil war itself and to subjects such as Lincoln's assassination (which gets wrapped up in about a page and a half). In a book this size, I find that remarkable. White wrote a lot of the same in "Eloquent President".
Besides the works I've mentioned, an excellent brief life is George McGovern's "Abraham Lincoln" in the TimesBooks "American Presidents" series -- the best of '09.
4 out of 9 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Citykid
Posted March 30, 2009
This is a very excellent book. After having read it I felt that I knew President Lincoln and had a better understanding of the entire family. I really enjoy a book that makes things come out of the book and off of the page and to me this does the trick. excellent. I also recommend reading Mrs.Lincoln. You will understand Mary Todd Lincoln better.
3 out of 4 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Most other books about Lincoln these days involve an aspect of his character, or a particular segment of his life. This one is the first I have read since David Herbert Donald's biography which covers Lincoln's life completely.
The writing is good, but there really is little in here that I haven't read before. White treats his subject as a human being, rather than as an icon, which is how biographies should be written. I found it a rather quick read, and well-researched. I'd recommend this as a book for someone who hasn't spent a lot of time researching Abraham Lincoln and just wants one book in his library about the 16th president. I don't think the reader will be disappointed.
3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted January 25, 2009
I Also Recommend:
Who would want to read this book?
It's bunch of politically correct bs. Come on. If you want to read something that is actually TRUE, read 'The Real Lincoln' By Thomas DiLorenzo. Otherwise, just steer clear of books that portray Lincoln as "good", "honest", and "the greatest president". Because he was should not be described by any of those.
In all reality, Lincoln hated African Americans. He started the Civil war to flex his "presidential muscles". And don't let anyone tell you that the Civil war was a war to 'end slavery'. Because it wasn't. Every other country that ended slavery did it peacefully. And Lincoln said many times that if he could get by without freeing the slaves, he would. Because they were the inferior race.
I could go on and on. But I'll leave you with that.
3 out of 26 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.No_spin_history_student
Posted April 28, 2009
Refreshing focus on Lincoln and facts directly related to him, unbiased with no spin, unhidden opinions backed by facts, educational and easy to read, best Lincoln biography I have ever read.
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Lunning
Posted February 7, 2010
Abraham Lincoln was born in Kentucky in 1809. As a child Lincoln moved many different times. Nancy Hanks, Lincoln's mother, died when he was still a boy. Thomas, Lincoln's father, later married a woman, Sarah Bush Johnston who helped raise Lincoln. In 1832 as soon as The Black Hawk War broke out he was the captain of his volunteer company. He ran two years later and won becoming a fixture of the Whip party in the General Assembly for the next eight years. In 1842 Lincoln married Mary Todd, having four boys but two later dyeing as a child. His political time was over but in 1850 the question of slavery rose again and that was when Lincoln hit it again but failing twice in 1854 and in 1858. Later Lincoln won the Republican nomination for presidency in 1860. South Carolina brought the establishment of the Confederate States of America, being independent nation apart from the United States. Attempting to reinforce Fort Sumter in Charleston, South Carolina, Confederate men shot at Lincoln's men and it was the start of the Civil War. Lincoln's most heroic moment as president was his Emancipation Proclamation in January 1, 1863. Because of this he provided a solid ground for the Thirteenth Amendment and the abolishment of slavery in the United States. Lincoln had enough support to be re-elected in 1864. Within less than a week the Confederates surrendered, while Lincoln was attending a Washington theater and getting shot in the head by John Wilkes Booth. Lincoln will forever be remembered as one of the greatest American heroes.
Lincoln had many important events happen to himself from his mom dying to the Gettysburg Address. Gettysburg was the turning point in the Civil War. After Gettysburg he wrote the Gettysburg Address, one of the most famous speeches only reaching two minutes. During the Civil War the Union took control of the Mississippi River from Vicksburg. Fredericksburg was a crucial defeat that the Union took on December 13, 1862. His father re-marring a woman a year after his first wife died. Troubling for Lincoln to get used to his new mother but they soon to grow stronger together. I loved this book because it goes into great depth about what Lincoln did as a child, teenager, as a father and as a president. Reading about what decisions he made as a president. Reading about the Civil War and what he had to do to make today the way it is. My dislikes about this book was they really didn't go too much into who his real mother was and how well her relationship was with his father. The description of people wasn't to strong either becoming a little confused with who each character was and what they did. Why someone should read this book would be because it provided great information about who Lincoln was and what he true did to change the way the United States was and what we are now. Our world would be so different if Lincoln never did what he did. Who knows if slavery could've been going on? Why someone should not read this book would be because it's not the most exciting book. It's very slow because it goes into great detail about what's going on but not the characters that were involved in his life. Other books that are related are, Abraham Lincoln: A Life, The Portable Abraham Lincoln, Writings of Abraham Lincoln and Team of Rivals : The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln. I would give this book an overall rating of 4.5 out of 5.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.a. lincoln is a well crafted biography on our 16th president. filled with lincoln family history,mezmorizing pictures and mind bottling prints of honest abes own writings. this biography brings its readers just a little bit closer to who abe lincoln was as a man.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.With all the books written on Lincoln it is refreshing to find a book that is enjoyable to read and provides the info one would like to learn about the 16th president.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.What I like best about the book is the way Abraham Lincoln is described as a person of deep religious faith with a thorough knowledge of the Scriptures. Faith seems to have been an early influence in Lincoln's life, which later public service and dealing with a national crisis further developed. White describes the particular role of Phineas Gurley, pastor of the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church in Washington, D.C., his sermons and pastoral care, in encouraging Lincoln's experience and expression of faith in God and the power of the Scriptures in guiding public discourse and policy.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted August 21, 2009
I really wanted to read a good bio about Abraham Lincoln. I know so little about one of America's most reverred presidents. However it seems that most biographies are either 700-1000 pages or 100 page bios for elementary school children. Why can't someone write a good 300-400 page bio? I don't need to know the text of every letter he ever wrote...
This bio on Lincoln assumed you knew the major historical points of the civil war, which I do not. It mentioned historical events with a one sentence explanation, so I oftened had to refer to the internet for a more thorough understanding of the events during Lincoln's life. Some major moments of Pres. Lincoln's life were just lightly glossed over, while some of his notes were analyzed for several pages.
Some key associates were described in great detail, while others were merely glossed over. How did Lincoln compare to his "rival-president" Jefferson Davis? What did some of his associates accomplish later in life? To understand President Lincoln, I think we also have to understand his friends, collegues and rivals.
There is also no mention of Lincoln's mental illness. Not a single word. How did someone who in hind-sight (since it was rarely realized/discussed in 1800 America) is diagnosed with severe depression, maybe bi-polar disease succeed in becoming President and making such a large mark on history. The author seems to ignore this fact and writes of a 'melancholy'. As a fellow sufferer of mental illness I was hoping to find comfort and inspiration in someone who also suffered but still managed to do great things in his life.
The book ends with Lincoln's assasination. Only one paragraph is writen about the funeral and nothing about the events after his death. I know the book is about Lincoln, so one might assume the best place to end the story is at the end of his life, but his story continued on past his death. How did the nation cope after his death? What happened to his family? How did his successors' continue or change his political agenda/ideas?
So I would recommend choosing another book to read to learn about Abraham Lincoln. Half way through the book, I just wanted to be done with it. I continued reading, so I could finish "his" story, but I was left wanting. So, do I now pick up another 700 page bio to fill in the missing pieces? Ugh!
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Overview
Everyone wants to define the man who signed his name “A. Lincoln.” In his lifetime and ever since, friend and foe have taken it upon themselves to characterize Lincoln according to their own label or libel. In this magnificent book, Ronald C. White, Jr., offers a fresh and compelling definition of Lincoln as a man of integrity–what today’s commentators would call “authenticity”–whose moral compass holds the key to understanding his life.Through meticulous research of the newly completed Lincoln Legal Papers, as well as of recently discovered letters and photographs, White provides a portrait of Lincoln’s personal, political, and moral evolution. White ...