Brian Eshleman’s Reviews > A Life in the Twentieth Century: Innocent Beginnings, 1917-1950 > Status Update
Brian Eshleman
is 32% done
“Civilizations die of boredom.“ Alfred North Whitehead
— Jun 22, 2019 01:54PM
Like flag
Brian’s Previous Updates
Brian Eshleman
is 86% done
On his daughter‘s amazed recollection that Schlesinger managed to write with his kids screaming around him, he admits, “True, I didn’t close my study door to the life of the household.
— Jun 27, 2019 02:11PM
Brian Eshleman
is 86% done
Historians are, like anybody else, prisoners of their own experience.
— Jun 26, 2019 03:15PM
Brian Eshleman
is 81% done
Schlesinger divides the 1947 Supreme Court between those addicted to process and those addicted to results.
Pretty accurate description of fallen humanity , I’d say.
— Jun 26, 2019 02:44PM
Pretty accurate description of fallen humanity , I’d say.
Brian Eshleman
is 81% done
Recognizing from half a century past that contemporary historians would emphasize different things than he did in the age of Andrew Jackson: “The present persistently and inevitably re-creates the past.“
— Jun 26, 2019 02:08PM
Brian Eshleman
is 67% done
My WASP snob is in insulin shock imagining the Good Old Days with the Georgetown set. I need to reread that book.
— Jun 26, 2019 09:23AM
Brian Eshleman
is 67% done
Schlesinger is narrating his and the country‘s transition from World War II into the 50s, and simultaneously giving the blow-by-blow on which is the dominant American nearest tube of the 1830s. Action on two screens is keeping my undiagnosed history major ADD riveted, but it may not be for everybody. I’m starting to understand why well-meaning people find my writing hard to follow.
— Jun 25, 2019 05:54PM
Brian Eshleman
is 67% done
On the slow adjustment of life after the official conclusion of World War II: "The war was over, but the melody lingered on."
It takes almost nothing to remind me that Christ is coming by fat He has not yet made all things new, but this certainly does.
— Jun 25, 2019 10:00AM
It takes almost nothing to remind me that Christ is coming by fat He has not yet made all things new, but this certainly does.
Brian Eshleman
is 67% done
Particularly with respect to the dropping of the atomic bomb, chip Bolin calls out what he calls hind-myopia, a refusal to take into account all the contemporary factors of a decision, including the negatives of what would happen if it was not made.
— Jun 25, 2019 09:58AM
Brian Eshleman
is 54% done
I'm going to have to try this again. I just wanted somebody else's vantage point on JFK. Turns out those around a president, maybe especially historian wordsmiths, have time and space to give to the grist of THEIR times as well. Hits some of my other likes such as wartime London, and those I didn't know I had like wartime political intelligence.
— Jun 25, 2019 09:28AM
Brian Eshleman
is 54% done
On JFK: as his political aide Fred Dutton once noted, that even if what was shown on the evening news did not by his definition constitute reality, then nonetheless in millions of homes it was perceived as reality.¹
— Jun 23, 2019 01:51PM

