The Whiskey Rebels
by
David Liss (Goodreads Author)
America, 1787. Ethan Saunders, once among General Washington’s most valued spies, is living in disgrace after an accusation of treason cost him his reputation. But an opportunity for redemption comes calling when Saunders’s old enemy, Alexander Hamilton, draws him into a struggle with bitter rival Thomas Jefferson over the creation of the Bank of the United States.
Meanwhil...more
Meanwhil...more
Paperback, 525 pages
Published
June 16th 2009
by Ballantine Books
(first published September 30th 2008)
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Historical fiction set in the immediate post-Revolutionary War period in Philadelphia and New York. The story is told from the point of view of two people: Ethan Saunders, a disgraced spy, and Joan Maycott, a young woman with literary aspirations. Ethan’s story begins in the present time while Joan’s starts in the past with her early life. Her and Ethan’s paths begin their fateful crossing when she and her husband Andrew trade in his war debt for a parcel of land in western Pennsylvania, which w...more
The Whiskey Rebels
I’ll tell you right off, I hate novels that are written in alternating chapters. My complaint is that one story is never allowed to develop without the interruption of another story, and though David Liss is a skillful writer, and the stories eventually intersect quite artfully, I still think it’s a lazy way to put a novel together. I know, I know, “try it yourself and see how easy it is…” Well, no, I won’t, but that doesn’t make it any less an irritation. The d...more
I’ll tell you right off, I hate novels that are written in alternating chapters. My complaint is that one story is never allowed to develop without the interruption of another story, and though David Liss is a skillful writer, and the stories eventually intersect quite artfully, I still think it’s a lazy way to put a novel together. I know, I know, “try it yourself and see how easy it is…” Well, no, I won’t, but that doesn’t make it any less an irritation. The d...more
This was another Early Reviewer book and the second I've read by Liss. He writes historical fiction and this particular book is set in America, shortly after the end of the Revolutionary War and deals with actual historical events and figures from the time. I thought it was really well written, and I found it much more engaging than The Coffee Trader, his other novel that I have read. (The Coffee Trader wasn't bad, I just found it dull at times). In any event, this book was quite good and has ma...more
The Whiskey Rebels takes place after the American Revolution. The primary characters are fictional, and many of the minor characters are prominent historical figures. The storyline was very interesting, and is written in the first person from the perspective of two different characters. One main character, Ethan Saunders, appears at the beginning of the book to be about as unlikely a hero as could be found. Ethan's story is told in alternating chapters with that of the other major character, ...more
For historical fiction fans who enjoy a plotline rather complicated with intrigue, usually offering opportunity for some reflection on how the forces of capitalism affected political and social change in another time and place, David Liss is an author you need to check out. I thoroughly enjoyed one of his earlier books, A Spectacle of Corruption, and looked forward to this volume with some eagerness, as western Pennsylvania has long been dear to me, and I anticipated a tale offering a view of p...more
Part potboiler, part history lesson, part financial treatise, part love story, part adventure tale, this highly entertaining novel by Goodreads author David Liss takes us back to the early days of America in the 1790s, when Alexander Hamilton was setting up the Bank of the United States, America was developing its first stock markets, and the frontier border was in the rugged woods of Western Pennsylvania.
"The Whiskey Rebels" is based on real historical events -- not ...more
Kirk
rated it
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
fiction lovers/Historical Fiction
Recommended to Kirk by:
Me - previously read Liss and loved it
So I wrote this about a month ago:
Looking forward to reading what I'm guessing is going to be another great historical fiction - this time set in the early founding days of the Good ol' USA.
And I was correct - it was both another great historical fiction from David Liss AND set in the early days of the US! A page-turning great historical fiction novel.
Without giving much away the story focuses on early America where going "west" meant Pittsburg. ...more
Looking forward to reading what I'm guessing is going to be another great historical fiction - this time set in the early founding days of the Good ol' USA.
And I was correct - it was both another great historical fiction from David Liss AND set in the early days of the US! A page-turning great historical fiction novel.
Without giving much away the story focuses on early America where going "west" meant Pittsburg. ...more
I love Liss's historical novels. This one is about the political atmosphere in the United States preceding the establishing of the first Bank of the United States and the Whiskey Rebellion. The characters are good and the mystery is complex.
The Whiskey Rebels is the latest book penned by David Liss. I think I fall in the minority when I say that I didn't really enjoy "A Conspiracy of Paper". So I wasn't sure what I'd get here... and I had no need to worry.
Whiskey Rebels is a book that I've already recommended to friends and will do so for some time. I had more fun following the tale as it weaved in and around the birth of the United States and the founding of the financial institutions.
The story follows a hopeless aging v...more
Whiskey Rebels is a book that I've already recommended to friends and will do so for some time. I had more fun following the tale as it weaved in and around the birth of the United States and the founding of the financial institutions.
The story follows a hopeless aging v...more
I've never quite understood the pigeonhole of "historical fiction". Is Denis Johnson's "Tree of Smoke" now historical fiction because it's set during the Vietnam War?
Liss is deeply steeped in the historical details of the post-revolutionary government, but you never find yourself climbing over over-stuffed boxes of information; the story rolls along from the opening pages and really doesn't let up. And given the current state of banks and economic markets it is (i...more
Liss is deeply steeped in the historical details of the post-revolutionary government, but you never find yourself climbing over over-stuffed boxes of information; the story rolls along from the opening pages and really doesn't let up. And given the current state of banks and economic markets it is (i...more
Liss, David. THE WHISKEY REBELS. (2008). ****. Liss is an excellent writer of historical thrillers/mysteries. His book, “A Conspiracy of Paper,” was excellent, and tough to beat with his subsequent efforts – though his second book, “The Coffee Trader,” came close. He has an inventive mind and is capable of interjecting fictional characters into the midst of well-researched historical events. This novel is set in the Federal Period, in the years between 1781 and 1792. The two principal pl...more
I vaguely remembered the Whiskey Rebellion against excise taxes leveled in the post revolutionary war period. The gist of what I recalled was that whiskey was much less bulky to ship, so the US governemnt started levying a tax on still production. What was left out of this instruction was the fact that the farmers had no currency to pay taxes, and that many of them were revolutionary war soldiers who had traded back pay vouchers for land on the frontier. David Liss always writes novels about eco...more
This is a well written and extremely well researched novel of the post-colonial period in American history. Ethan Saunders is a former spy with Washington’s army who finds himself wrongly disgraced at the end of the Revolutionary War and has fallen into a pit of despair for failing at every attempt to clear his name. Concurrently, Joan Maycott, the wife of a handsome, wounded veteran of the same conflict attempts, along with her husband, to establish a new life on the western frontier, which i...more
Rating: 4.5* of five
Liss in true Liss form! I adored A Conspiracy of Paper and A Spectacle of Corruption and enjoyed greatly The Coffee Trader. Mr. Liss is a writer with several gifts, and seemingly displays them to their best advantage in works of historical fiction. (I was no fan of The Ethical Assassin since it felt undeveloped and unfinished to me.)
Most unusually, Mr. Liss can take any business conflict and make it into a story. He tells us the story of the business panic...more
Liss in true Liss form! I adored A Conspiracy of Paper and A Spectacle of Corruption and enjoyed greatly The Coffee Trader. Mr. Liss is a writer with several gifts, and seemingly displays them to their best advantage in works of historical fiction. (I was no fan of The Ethical Assassin since it felt undeveloped and unfinished to me.)
Most unusually, Mr. Liss can take any business conflict and make it into a story. He tells us the story of the business panic...more
It may be a coincidence, however I picked this book up a few weeks ago, just as the Occupy Wall Street movement began. Set in the 1790s, just after Hamilton had established the national bank, the main characters are an ex-Revolutionary War spy and a woman who moves with her young veteran husband to the frontier after exchanging their war bonds for land. The story is thrilling and suspenseful, as well as thought-provoking as it covers events remarkably similar to today's issues: speculators at...more
I'd love to give this 4 & 1/2 stars - it's a rollicking tale from start to finish! The story, set in post-Revolutionary War Pennsylvania and New York, alternates between two engaging narrators: Joan Maycott, is a self-possessed young woman with who reads 'Wealth of Nations' and other economic treatises, and Captain Ethan Saunders, a spy for the American side during the war, falsely accused of treason and now fallen on hard times. Captain Saunders is a loveable rogue in the best tradition, an ...more
I now officially wish that I could give books half stars. When going back and forth between "I really liked it" and "It was amazing." I find myself somewhere in the middle.
I, myself am surprised that I liked this book so much as I did. For one, historical fiction is really quite hit or miss with me. (That isn't to say that I don't like it, rather that my tolerance can be low.) Also, I rarely ever like alternating chapters as a method to tell a story unless it is be...more
I, myself am surprised that I liked this book so much as I did. For one, historical fiction is really quite hit or miss with me. (That isn't to say that I don't like it, rather that my tolerance can be low.) Also, I rarely ever like alternating chapters as a method to tell a story unless it is be...more
I thought this was an excellent read. Set just after the Revolutionary War, Liss takes us to Philadelphia, Pittsburg and New York during the time that the new experiment in government was tring to figure it out. He mixes fictional characters with acual historic ones. The story is told through two voices, Ethan Saunders, a former Armey officer who was discharged with rumors of being a spy. The other voice is Joan Maycott. We meet her as a precocious young woman who snags the man of her dream...more
Two intersecting stories look at the early 1790s, where America begins its great experiment as a young republic with schemes and intrigue from the factions supporting/opposing Alexander Hamilton’s vision for a federal bank. There are many historical details to savor and enjoy here, and the plot takes some intriguing twists and turns. Moreover, reading such a tale in the midst of a modern-day economic crisis adds a certain morbid fascination and perspective to the descriptions of 18th century mar...more
This week I finished "The Whiskey Rebels" by David Liss and I wonder if I'm overhyping it to say that I'm not sure I've enjoyed a book more in the last five years.
"The Whiskey Rebels" is a historical novel, set in the 1790s, that has authenticity and the ring of long hours of research, but it's a rip roaring yarn as well. When I tell you that it concerns intrigue swirling around Alexander Hamilton's fiscal policies and the establishment of the Bank of the United Sta...more
"The Whiskey Rebels" is a historical novel, set in the 1790s, that has authenticity and the ring of long hours of research, but it's a rip roaring yarn as well. When I tell you that it concerns intrigue swirling around Alexander Hamilton's fiscal policies and the establishment of the Bank of the United Sta...more
David Liss’ new novel, set in an America where financial collapse is imminent, teems with double crosses, political intrigue, concealed identities, blackmail, spies and sex scandals. The stock market is on a rollercoaster ride and brokers on the trading floor reek of panic and floppy sweat.
Welcome to 1792.
In his fourth novel, The Whiskey Rebels, Liss takes readers back to frontier America where determined patriots plot to bring about the collapse of the new Bank of the U...more
Welcome to 1792.
In his fourth novel, The Whiskey Rebels, Liss takes readers back to frontier America where determined patriots plot to bring about the collapse of the new Bank of the U...more
The Whiskey Rebels, by David Liss, was another free sample ebook, but I'd been meaning to read another one of Liss's books anyway, so I decided to start with the free one.
This novel is not about the Whiskey Rebels that you've heard of, but rather about a group of "Westerners" (residing near Pittsburgh) who'd been cheated out of their back pay from serving in the Revolutionary War, in exchange for nonusable land. They resort to selling whiskey, the most portable commodity they...more
This novel is not about the Whiskey Rebels that you've heard of, but rather about a group of "Westerners" (residing near Pittsburgh) who'd been cheated out of their back pay from serving in the Revolutionary War, in exchange for nonusable land. They resort to selling whiskey, the most portable commodity they...more
What's this, a fiscal historical thriller? How can that work?
Oh, but it does. David Liss gives us a sharply written narrative with as much literary merit as action, and a complex plot teeming with interesting characters, from historical figures to likable scoundrels. It works even if your knowledge of early America and the Whiskey Rebellion are sketchy.
Two story arcs eventually come together here. Disgraced spy Ethan Saunders is drawn into the rivalry between Alexander Ha...more
Oh, but it does. David Liss gives us a sharply written narrative with as much literary merit as action, and a complex plot teeming with interesting characters, from historical figures to likable scoundrels. It works even if your knowledge of early America and the Whiskey Rebellion are sketchy.
Two story arcs eventually come together here. Disgraced spy Ethan Saunders is drawn into the rivalry between Alexander Ha...more
This book is written from a two first-person perspective, which intrigued me. How could he blend the stories of these two people? Not only were the stories set in different locations, they were also set in different times. One was the story of a woman, the other a man. (For once, I didn't feel skeptical of a male author's depiction of a woman's feelings.)
I learned more about the reasons for the Whiskey Rebellion and felt great compassion for the farmers and distillers so adversel...more
I learned more about the reasons for the Whiskey Rebellion and felt great compassion for the farmers and distillers so adversel...more
OK, I’m not a whiskey fan by any stretch of the imagination, but after reading "The Whiskey Rebels", David Liss’ latest and thoroughly satisfying novel, I can assure you I’m absolutely going to give Jack Daniels another try. Liss’ deliciously riveting account of how a host of resourceful, newly minted Americans found prosperity distilling whiskey in the wilds of western Pennsylvania and stand to lose everything is just one aspect of this gripping read that centers around our Founding F...more
The Whiskey Rebels” is one of those rare historical novels that plunges readers deep into its chosen era and fills the imagination with characters that leap off the page. Set in post-revolutionary America (late 1700’s) David Liss tells a tale of intrigue, politics and unrequited love through the eyes of two characters: Joan Maycott and Ethan Saunders. Joan is an intelligent, headstrong woman who transforms before our eyes from a doe-eyed teenager who dreams of writing novels, to an iron-backed r...more
So, you're into historical fiction. And, on occasion, you truly enjoy a political thriller. Yet you also tend to savor a good mystery. Should that be the case--along with the added bonus of engaging, clever writing--may I recommend THE WHISKEY REBELS?
Set in America's infancy--a 1792 that saw the fragile American Experiment in danger of being torn asunder by the Hamiltonian Federalists and the Jeffersonian Republicans--author David Liss presents two protagonists, both with compelling...more
Set in America's infancy--a 1792 that saw the fragile American Experiment in danger of being torn asunder by the Hamiltonian Federalists and the Jeffersonian Republicans--author David Liss presents two protagonists, both with compelling...more
I was expecting more. I loved The Coffee Trader, great historical fiction about the origins of coffee as well as earliest commodities market in 17th century Amsterdam. Fascinating! This one? Not so much. Alas, it had precious little to do with Whiskey. Takes place in Philadelphia and wilderness of western PA in the years following the Revolutionary War. Dual protags -- a war hero who may or may not be a traitor named Ethan Saunders, is a great character. His story intersects with that of a femal...more
Set post American Revolution it features 2 main characters, Ethan Saunders, a spy during the war but near the end of the war accused of being a traitor and Joan Maycott, a daughter of a farmer who marries a soldier and when he is convinced to give up his promissory note for pay for his service in return for a section of land on the western Pennsylvania frontier moves out with him.
Ethan has become a drunk and womanizer but when his old finance contacts him he becomes involved in trying to ...more
Ethan has become a drunk and womanizer but when his old finance contacts him he becomes involved in trying to ...more
ladywallingford
rated it
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
Post-American Revolution enthusiasts
Shelves:
historical-fiction
Surprisingly enough, I rather enjoyed this book although normally I don't really get into government espionage stories, even when said story is set in the past (specifically right after the Revolutionary War).
I thought the author set up the story rather well. He took an event from America's history, the financial Panic of 1792, and weaves a very likely story around it while also using these events as a way to explain the Whiskey Rebellion of 1794. The story follows two fictional pr...more
I thought the author set up the story rather well. He took an event from America's history, the financial Panic of 1792, and weaves a very likely story around it while also using these events as a way to explain the Whiskey Rebellion of 1794. The story follows two fictional pr...more
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| review | 3 | 22 | Nov 01, 2011 07:30pm | |
| Key West Library: Print vs. audio | 1 | 4 | Sep 09, 2011 01:22pm | |
| Key West Library: Revolutionary War fiction | 1 | 1 | Sep 02, 2011 12:55pm |
I am a novelist living in San Antonio, Texas, though, for the record, I am not from Texas. I just live here. I have four novels published: A Conspiracy of Paper (which won the Edgar Award for Best First Novel) and A Spectacle of Corruption were both national bestsellers. They are set in 18th century London and feature Benjamin Weaver, a Jewish former pugilist, thief-taker for hire. Weaver will be ...more
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“I enjoy my pettiness with a dose of wit.”
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“I did not tremble to lose what men called beauty, but I feared the loss of my spirit and humor and love of living, the things I believed made my soul human and vibrant.”
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