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  <id type="integer">6462</id>
  <isbn>1400032539</isbn>
  <isbn13>9781400032532</isbn13>
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  <title>
    <![CDATA[His Excellency: George Washington]]>
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  <average_rating>3.86</average_rating>
  <ratings_count>1723</ratings_count>
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    <![CDATA[To this landmark biography of our first president, Joseph J. Ellis brings the exacting scholarship, shrewd analysis, and lyric prose that have made him one of the premier historians of the Revolutionary era. Training his lens on a figure who sometimes seems as remote as his effigy on Mount Rushmore, Ellis assesses George Washington as a military and political leader and a man whose “statue-like solidity” concealed volcanic energies and emotions.<br/><br/>Here is the impetuous young officer whose miraculous survival in combat half-convinced him that he could not be killed. Here is the free-spending landowner whose debts to English merchants instilled him with a prickly resentment of imperial power. We see the general who lost more battles than he won and the reluctant president who tried to float above the partisan feuding of his cabinet. <em>His Excellency</em> is a magnificent work, indispensable to an understanding not only of its subject but also of the nation he brought into being.]]>
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    <author>
    <id>1483</id>
        <name><![CDATA[Joseph J. Ellis]]></name>
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    <average_rating>3.87</average_rating>
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  </authors>  <published>2004</published>
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  <read_at>Mon Dec 01 00:00:00 -0800 2008</read_at>
  <date_added>Sat Dec 27 07:24:58 -0800 2008</date_added>
  <date_updated>Sat Dec 27 07:51:51 -0800 2008</date_updated>
  <read_count></read_count>
    <body><![CDATA[I listened to Ellis' excellent biography of George Washington on CD in my car during my commutes over a period of about a week, saturating my mind in early American lives and times.  Ellis' contribution in Founding Brothers was to remind us that the 'founding fathers' were not a group of stodgy old ...<a href="http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/40999854">more...</a>]]></body>
    
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