Mike’s Reviews > Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation > Status Update
Mike
is 55% done
I just don't find the founding fathers as interesting as Ellis does. I'm not gonna be invested in this.
— Jul 17, 2015 10:47AM
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Mike’s Previous Updates
Mike
is 80% done
It fascinates me how deeply hypocritical the framers were. John Adams seemed to think he believed in a fundamentally egalitarian society, despite doing little about slavery, the oppression of women, or the plight of Native Americans in this era. It's interesting that so many people thought this way.
— Jul 22, 2015 06:21PM
Mike
is 75% done
I don't really know what else there is to say about this. It's not getting any more interesting.
— Jul 21, 2015 08:26PM
Mike
is 70% done
This is, overall, remarkably uninteresting to me. I dunno, a lot of people seem to have enjoyed it, but it's not doing anything for me.
— Jul 20, 2015 06:32PM
Mike
is 70% done
This is, overall, remarkably uninteresting to me. I dunno, a lot of people seem to have enjoyed it, but it's not doing anything for me.
— Jul 20, 2015 06:31PM
Mike
is 65% done
Ellis' writing is kind of engaging, even if what he's talking about isn't. I'll give him that.
— Jul 19, 2015 02:47PM
Mike
is 60% done
This is mostly a character study of the framers. Which would be fine, except that the ways in which their actions affected Americans is an essential part of that study, and it's completely neglected.
— Jul 18, 2015 09:05PM
Mike
is 50% done
The problem with this book is that Ellis treats the early U.S. government more like a philosophical RPG than an actual government. He rarely acknowledges that the actions of the founding fathers had a profound effect on the people that they governed. It's unabashed Great Man History, and it ignores the most important part of the story.
— Jul 16, 2015 06:10PM
Mike
is 45% done
This is very decidedly pro-Founding Fathers. Which I guess is what you get with an analysis that completely overlooks the effects that their actions had on the masses.
— Jul 15, 2015 01:25PM
Mike
is 40% done
James Madison: the original bloodsucking American politician.
— Jul 14, 2015 06:45PM
Mike
is 35% done
The slavery bits are more interesting, although I disagree with Ellis' assertion that the Declaration of Independence was unambiguous in its rejection of slavery. Maybe the first draft was, but it was edited specifically to take out the anti-slavery bits. Not to mention that the author of the document owned slaves himself... saying that it was unambiguously anti-slavery gives the framers too much credit.
— Jul 13, 2015 04:10PM

