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Book cover of George Washington
United States History - 18th Century - American Revolution, Executive Branch, U.S. Armed Forces - Biography, U.S. - Political Biography, Political Biography, Historical Biography - United States, United States Armed Forces, United States History - 18th Ce

George Washington

by Willard Sterne Randall, George Washington
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Overview

George Washington is the human story of a man who turned an impoverished childhood and the frequent humiliations at the hands of a mother he feared and the British generals he admired into a career of rebellion and creation. When he had worn out and nearly bankrupted his allies, George Washington disbanded the victorious army he had forged and resigned to Congress, giving life to democratic government. George III once said that if Washington could give up power, he would be the greatest man of the eighteenth century. And Washington did. Twice. As the bicentennial of Washington's death approaches on December 14, 1999, a large American public is keen to know the human story of our founding father.

Synopsis

A full-scale, single-volume biography of the nation's first president.

Times-Union (Albany) - Fred Stetson

Like many great figures, inconsistencies mark Washington's life and Randall delineates them with a skill... Washington emerges as a largely self-educated, self-made man, driven to place distance between himself and his mother, driven to acquire westward land and a mass of fortune driven to lead men into glorious battle and children to gain freedom from all forms of oppression.

About the Author, Willard Sterne Randall

Willard Sterne Randall lives in Burlington, Vermont. His Thomas Jefferson was hailed by The Wall Street Journal as "outstanding . . . a splid one-volume biography."

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Editorials

Fred Stetson

Like many great figures, inconsistencies mark Washington's life and Randall delineates them with a skill... Washington emerges as a largely self-educated, self-made man, driven to place distance between himself and his mother, driven to acquire westward land and a mass of fortune driven to lead men into glorious battle and children to gain freedom from all forms of oppression.
β€” Times-Union (Albany)

Robert M. Calhoon

Willard Sterne Randall... makes historical figures accessible by emphasizing visible behavior and broad contours of personalities.
β€” The News and Observer (Raleigh)

Kirkus Reviews

Biographer Randall (Thomas Jefferson, 1993) adds another compelling figure to his portrait gallery of America's early leaders.

It was one of the triumphs of Washington's life that, when stymied in one of his ambitions, he found an outlet for it elsewhere. Though frustrated, for instance, in his desire to become a career British army officer because of undistinguished service in the French and Indian War (he was accused of touching off the war by killing a French officer who may have been on a diplomatic mission), he learned how to defeat the British through speed and knowledge of the terrain by witnessing firsthand the defeat of his commander, Gen. Edward Braddock. With almost half of this account devoted to Washington's pre-Revolutionary life, Randall compresses the more consequential war and early Federal years, thus sacrificing some of the drama that galvanized his biography of Benedict Arnold. On the other hand, Randall shrewdly details how Washington's dealings with hostile foes and haughty allies in the French and Indian War and his secret alliances with other patriots made him "a master of discretion and deception." He provides new insight into how Washington's growing awareness of the pitfalls of Virginia's tobacco economy led to disenchantment with the British mercantile system. Most important, he finds a thread between the prewar micromanaging plantation owner and the wartime ringmaster of intelligence units and surprise engagements like Trenton, discovering "the first modern American corporate executive." While displaying a more dry-eyed willingness to countenance unpleasant actions than what one expects (e.g., ordering Arnold's assassination), this Washington is also moving in his renunciations of power at the end of the revolution and at the end of his second term as president.

Not the landmark in storytelling and scholarship achieved by previous Washington biographers Douglas Southall Freeman and James Thomas Flexner, but an often penetrating narrative of Washington's formative influences.

Book Details

Published
November 1, 1998
Publisher
Holt, Henry & Company, Inc.
Pages
512
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780805059922

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