Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation
by Joseph J. Ellis
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bookshelves:
history,
read-2008
Read in May, 2008
recommends it for:
anyone interested in American history
As a lover of all things historical and a casual reader of history books, I thought that Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation was very informative and educational. I learned many things about America's founding fathers and the revolutionary period of history that I didn't previously know. The book is laid out in six separate vignettes, each following a crucial event in that era of history: the duel between Aaron Burr and Alexander Hamilton; a private deal that was made between ...more
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nonfiction
Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in August, 2007
The book is divided into six chapters, preceded by a preface and ending with a section of notes and an index. Joseph Ellis uses footnotes generously, making citations left and right, as any researcher would. However, the footnotes are not, as one might think, located at the foot of the page, but at the end of the book. While this would be acceptable were the footnotes simply citations, Ellis also offers explanations and asides, which only provides the reader with the unfortunate task of flipping...more
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Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in May, 2008
Founding Brothers knocks my socks off. The story of the United States in the revolutionary era is so spectacular, that I believe not even the most creative fiction writer could have concocted such a remarkable string of events. This non-fiction account of the US from prior to the declaration of Independance through the death of Adams and Jefferson in 1826 describes the lives of the more prominent founding fathers not as historical hot-shits as we know them to be, but as ordinary people that the ...more
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A great read for those wanting to get a grasp of the political intricacies behind our nation's founding. Rather than focusing on events--it doesn't touch on the war except in brief retrospect--"Founding Brothers" explores how the political relationships and battles between men like Alexander Hamilton, George Washington, John Adams, Jefferson, Madison, and Franklin (not to mention Abigail Adams) shaped and sustained the U.S. What was striking for me was Ellis's assertion in the intro th...more
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Read in September, 2007
I recently finished reading the book Founding Brothers by Joseph Ellis and would like to present a mini-review of it.
This isn't a new book. It's been out for quite a while and has even spawned an A & E miniseries by the same name which is available on DVD. Could be a good Christmas gift. (*hint hint*)
Without going into too much of the detail of specific historical events surrounding the Revolutionary War and the creation of the Declaration Of Independence and the U.S. Constitutio...more
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bookshelves:
history
Read in August, 2008
recommends it for:
Early American History Afficionados
I think giving this book five stars actually does a disservice to the author: It deserves 20! Joesph Ellis' work, Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation, is a wonderful narrative that immerses the reader in the minds of the founders of the United States of America, and explores the consequences of their actions (or inactions).
Ellis divides the book into six chapters, each revolving around a pivotal point in time, or around specific persons. People mentioned, specifically:
* Georg...more
Ellis divides the book into six chapters, each revolving around a pivotal point in time, or around specific persons. People mentioned, specifically:
* Georg...more
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Read in March, 2008
Founding Brothers is the Pulitzer Prize-winning United States history book written by Joseph J. Ellis.
The book brings to life the personalities of seven men who helped shape the beginning of this country and reveals them as the imperfect but determined people that they were. Those men are George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin (although he makes very brief appearances), James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and Aaron Burr.
Specifically, Founding Brothers looks at the...more
The book brings to life the personalities of seven men who helped shape the beginning of this country and reveals them as the imperfect but determined people that they were. Those men are George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin (although he makes very brief appearances), James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and Aaron Burr.
Specifically, Founding Brothers looks at the...more
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This is an outstanding description of 6 of the men most involved in the founding of America: Washington, Hamilton, John Adams, Jefferson, Madison, and Franklin. Ellis has done an excellent job of bringing out the details of the inner workings of these men at the early beginnings of America, for the most part, after the Constitution was adopted. Sometimes the book reads like a textbook and certainly could be used as such in a political science class. I enjoyed the book because it gave me mor...more
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bookshelves:
history
Read in December, 2007
I loved this book. Ellis dips deeply into moments in the life of the revolutionary generation and teaches more about the history of that time than anything i have ever read or been taught.
His moments include: The Duel - when Aaron Burr killed Alexander Hamilton.
The Dinner - Thomas Jefferson, then secretary of state works with Alexander Hamilton, secretary fo the treasury, holds a dinner party. The issue is that Hamilton's plan for recovery of public credit was in gridlock. Hamilton p...more
His moments include: The Duel - when Aaron Burr killed Alexander Hamilton.
The Dinner - Thomas Jefferson, then secretary of state works with Alexander Hamilton, secretary fo the treasury, holds a dinner party. The issue is that Hamilton's plan for recovery of public credit was in gridlock. Hamilton p...more
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bookshelves:
american-history,
the-american-revolution
Read in September, 2007
recommends it for:
Ted, Michael
This book is a collection of historical short stories composed by the historian, Joseph Ellis, who has spent his career focused on this particular generation. With biographies published on Adams, Washington and Jefferson, Ellis should certainly be considered one of if not the premier revolutionary historian of modern times.
In the re-telling of late 19th century, post-revolutionary America-- through the accounts of seven of that generations most notable figures-- his task was daunting. Bu...more
In the re-telling of late 19th century, post-revolutionary America-- through the accounts of seven of that generations most notable figures-- his task was daunting. Bu...more
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pastreadsworthrevisiting
Read in June, 2006
recommends it for:
EVERYONE
Thanks to my former roommate, I developed a serious obsession with The West Wing, which made me really interested, for the first time in my life, to put fiction aside for the better part of this year and start to read about the history of this country about which I have so many opinions.
The person who recommended this book to me told me it should be required reading for every high school student in this country, and I have to agree. Ellis brings human faces to some of the most common Big Nam...more
The person who recommended this book to me told me it should be required reading for every high school student in this country, and I have to agree. Ellis brings human faces to some of the most common Big Nam...more
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Read in July, 2008
Knowing little about this historic time period (and most details in history, I'm ashamed to say), I was a bit worried about what to expect from a relatively short book (although I was much less intimidated by it because of its short length). I didn't know if I needed more background knowledge to grasp briefly explained concepts or if it would tell me so little as to not have learned enough for my liking. I was not disappointed in either regard.
'Founding Brothers' consists of six stories o...more
'Founding Brothers' consists of six stories o...more
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recommended to Ginger by:
my american history prof.
recommends it for: no one.
recommends it for: no one.
This book was the first book that ever made me cry because it was too hard to read pleasurably. I felt like the author took stories we all already know about, and locked himself in a dark room with a thesaurus and babelfish and used the LOLZCATZ approach to writing, only in historese. I frustra-cried, it was that bad.
I felt double bad about this book because I had bought it for my dad earlier in the year as a birthday gift, and when it was on the required reading list of my American History c...more
I felt double bad about this book because I had bought it for my dad earlier in the year as a birthday gift, and when it was on the required reading list of my American History c...more
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Read in August, 2007
This book is about the past histories and stories of our founding fathers. These include the notable George Washington, James Madison, Alexandar Hamilton, Thomas Jefferson and more. These characters are almost fictional because of the way the author talks about them. He writes off them in a careful manner, not to expose too much but tells enough about their actions.
The book is a collection of six stories each which details important parts in American history. One of the chapters...more
The book is a collection of six stories each which details important parts in American history. One of the chapters...more
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Read in February, 2008
What a disappointment. Founding Brothers reads like an apologetic for long-time Founding Father of disrepute, John Adams, whose aggrandizement here expectedly reduces Thomas Jefferson to the dual role of timely revolutionary opportunist and self-deluding contradictorian, which may not be a word. Given this, Adams' non-maneuver of allowing the Treaty of Tripoli to be unanimously ratified by the Senate in 1797 is a conspicuous no-show. Or did it not quite raise the pedestal to advertise his...more
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4 comments
bookshelves:
history
Read in February, 2003
i picked this book up as a high school senior, not knowing that it would enflame my pasison for history for years to come. i guess this book started it all. and why not, it's an excellent look at the heroes of america. the author does all he can to humanize the men who have lived so long after their death in the patriotic spirits of every american. and he succeeds in not neccessarily lowering them to our level, but in merely removing them from the stratosphere, visible enough so that we american...more
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Read in February, 2007
recommends it for:
Anyone interested in Revolutionary America
Ellis has created a neat collaboration of anecdotes about the intertwining lives of the most heralded figures of American's Revolutionary generation. They are all here -- Washington, Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, Adams, Burr, Hamilton, and Franklin. Ellis' collection of factoids and stories about the most critical generation of our nation's youthful years does well to contradict the convenient patriotism of America's highschool history textbooks. Although all of these men and woman (Abigail Ada...more
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bookshelves:
history
Read in March, 2007
I love Joseph Ellis anyway, but this is a very readable look at some of the major issues facing our founding fathers during the early republic. Ellis sets up the book by using failry well known events (the Burr/Hamilton duel, Washington's farewell address, the Dinner party where Jefferson, Madison, and Hamilton traded the location of the capitol on the Potomac for congressional support of Hamilton's financial plan, Jefferson and Adams' famous friendship, etc) to elaborate and explore major them...more
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This is a truly amazing book. I have a greater appreciation of Washington not just as a great leader and general but as a man who understood where America should be headed. It is so interesting to read about the men who created our country and to understand what they believed and how they acted.
I would recommend reading it because so much of our beliefs and understanding of our reality is influenced by what we think we know about this history....I have learned that we have some misperceptio...more
I would recommend reading it because so much of our beliefs and understanding of our reality is influenced by what we think we know about this history....I have learned that we have some misperceptio...more
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Read in August, 2007
Even though he used the words "congeal" and "crucible" a few too many times, this book analyzed and picked apart the characters of the Revolutionary Era in surprisingly interesting and illuminating ways. Despite having seemingly spent all of my high school history career lodged in either the Revolutionary War or WWII, this book made it clear that I had never properly understood the interrelations between the Founding Fathers. I didn't realize that John Adams had beef with Ale...more
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