|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
| February 15, 2013 | November 14, 2012 |
|
|
||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||
Recommendations
Products
- Online Price: $12.39Save 41%
- Add to Cart
- Online Price: $10.05Save 37%
- Add to Cart
- Online Price: $18.76Save 33%
- Add to Cart
- Online Price: $25.16Save 37%
- Add to Cart
- Online Price: $21.63Save 38%
- Add to Cart
- Online Price: $16.17Save 40%
- Add to Cart
- Online Price: $16.46Save 43%
- Add to Cart
- Online Price: $14.16Save 43%
- Add to Cart
- Online Price: $16.50Save 43%
- Add to Cart
- Online Price: $16.52Save 41%
- Add to Cart
- Online Price: $17.97Save 38%
- Add to Cart
- Online Price: $21.24Save 41%
- Add to Cart
- Online Price: $21.94Save 37%
- Add to Cart
- Online Price: $15.67Save 44%
- Add to Cart
- Online Price: $17.50Save 50%
- Add to Cart
- Online Price: $21.60Save 40%
- Add to Cart
- Online Price: $25.20Save 37%
- Add to Cart
- Online Price: $16.49Save 41%
- Add to Cart
- Online Price: $8.20Save 41%
- Add to Cart
- Online Price: $8.47Save 43%
- Add to Cart
Related Categories Books > Biography & Autobiography > Presidents & Heads of State |
Publishers Weekly® Reviews
- Reviewed in: Publishers Weekly, page .
- Review Date: 2012-07-16
- Reviewer: Staff
Another Jefferson biography (right on the heels of Henry Wiencek’s Master of the Mountain)! Fortunately, Meacham’s is a fine work, deserving a place high on the list of long biographies of its subject even if rivaled by such shorter ones as Richard B. Bernstein’s Thomas Jefferson. Like David McCullough’s John Adams (to which it can be seen as a counterpart), Meacham’s book is a love letter to its subject. While he’s fully conversant with long-held skepticism about aspects of Jefferson’s character (his dissimulation, for instance) and his stance toward slavery, Meacham gives him the benefit of the doubt throughout (on, for example, his Revolutionary War governorship of Virginia and the draconian 1807 embargo). To Meacham, who won a Pulitzer for his American Lion, Jefferson was a philosopher/politician, and “the most successful political figure of the first half century of the American republic.” Those words only faintly suggest the inspirational tone of the entire work. Meacham understandably holds Jefferson up as the remarkable figure he was. But in the end, as fine a rendering of the nation’s third president as this book may be, it comes too close to idolization. Jefferson’s critics still have something valid to say, even if their voices here are stilled. Agent: Amanda Urban, ICM. (Nov.)
Power, politics and public life
Thomas Jefferson’s eloquent writings have made him revered as the nation’s premier spokesman for democracy. A man of the Enlightenment, he pursued an extraordinary range of interests and served in the nation’s highest offices; a man of contradictions, he cultivated the image of a philosopher who was above the political fray. And yet, as Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer Jon Meacham demonstrates in Thomas Jefferson: The Art of Power, our third president was as much a man of action as he was of ideas.
Meacham’s Jefferson, at his core, was a politician who eagerly sought office where he could work toward the future he envisioned for his country. In his meticulously researched and very readable book, Meacham writes, “The closest thing to a constant in his life was his need for power and control. He tended to mask these drives so effectively . . . the most astute observers of his life and work had trouble detecting them.”
Once in office he emphasized one overarching political concern: the survival and success of popular government. More than George Washington or John Adams, he believed in the possibilities of human beings governing themselves. Like all effective politicians, he articulated the ideal but acted pragmatically, as in the case of the Louisiana Purchase. The philosophical Jefferson thought there first should be a constitutional amendment authorizing the president to purchase new territory. But when it seemed Napoleon might change his mind, the realist Jefferson immediately went ahead with the deal without an amendment. His personal political style was smooth, although he relied on his allies to be more confrontational. Indeed, Meacham believes Jefferson led so quietly that popular history tends to downplay his presidential achievements.
The book also examines Jefferson’s hypocrisy on slavery. He knew slavery was morally wrong but he could not bring himself to sacrifice his own way of life on an issue whose time, as he saw it, had not yet come. After attempts early in his career to limit slavery, he gave up trying, concluding that to pursue it would end whatever future he might have in public life.
Jefferson comes alive in this discerning and elegant biography, surely one of the best single volumes about him written in our time.





































