I know I had this very book and I think I read it
Seems like it was very good. Around this time I remember watching Danton on Showtime or similar and thought it was tremendous. Seems like it was Polish made. This was 1989 the bicentennial, so it was a thing.
I was caught up in some radical right stuff at the time, but I don't remember this Webster book being overboard in that direction. I always was on the verge of reading Dickens Tale of Two Cities but didn't. Same with Edmund Burkes Reflections on the French Revolution. I did read a bunch of stuff on Napoleon at war, and have read War and Peace twice. First time I was maybe late 20s and didn't even realize Nap was traipsing around my paternal grandmother's homeland of Lithuania. Once I grasped Lithuania and got a handle on the archaic place names I reread it. Seems like I didn't digest much of the last 20% either time.
Just dug out Mary Wollencrofts Defense of Thomas Paines The Rights of Man which I think is a counter to the Burke Reflections book. I am probably more open to these ideas these days. My thinking has shifted some over the years. The Bushes Patriot Act and 9/11 wars and stuff, some Trumpishness and my current project of solving the JFK Assassination have all changed my view somewhat. I try to give the Dem's a chance but they are worse, and are making things worse, and trending towards 1984.