David Herbert Donald is the author of We Are Lincoln Men, Lincoln, which won the prestigious Lincoln Prize and was on the New York Times bestseller list for fourteen weeks, and Lincoln at Home. He has twice won the Pulitzer Prize, for Charles Sumner and the Coming of the Civil War, and for Look Homeward: A Life of Thomas Wolfe. He is the Charles Warren Professor of American History and of American Civilization Emeritus at Harvard University and resides in Lincoln, Massachusetts.
Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. "A grand work--the Lincoln biography for this generation."
Donald, a two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning author and distinguished scholar of the Civil War era (Charles Sumner), offers here a provocative reinterpretation of Abraham Lincoln's career and character. Donald presents Lincoln's nature as essentially passive. Throughout his life, according to Donald, Lincoln believed his destiny was controlled by some larger force or ``higher power.'' This conviction generated both an underlying fatalism and a pragmatic approach to problem-solving. If one approach‘or one general‘failed, another could be tried. Although the information available to Lincoln was often significantly limited by modern standards, bold plans based on a priori reasoning were foreign to his thought process. Instead, it was Lincoln's ability to respond to events and actions that brought the U.S. through its greatest crisis and established the matrix for successful, if imperfect, reunification. BOMC split main selection; History Book Club main selection. (Oct.)
David W. Blight Los Angeles Times "A one-volume study of Lincoln's
life that will augment and replace the previous modern standards by
Benjamin Thomas (1953) and Stephen Oates (1977). Donald's
Lincoln is a scholarly achievement."
Harold Holzer Chicago Tribune "Lincoln immediately takes its
place among the best of the genre, and it is unlikely that it will
be surpassed in elegance, incisiveness and originality in this
century. . . . A book of investigative tenacity, interpretive
boldness and almost acrobatic balance."
James M. McPherson The Atlantic Monthly "Eagerly awaited,
Lincoln fulfills expectations. Donald writes with lucidity
and elegance."
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