David O. Stewart is an award-winning author and the president of the Washington Independent Review of Books. He is the author of several acclaimed histories, including Madison's Gift: Five Partnerships That Built America; The Summer of 1787: The Men Who Invented the Constitution; Impeached: The Trial of President Andrew Johnson and the Fight for Lincoln's Legacy; and American Emperor: Aaron Burr's Challenge to Jefferson's America. Stewart's first novel is The Lincoln Deception.
"Crafting the Constitution was one of the most amazing collaborations in human history. David O. Stewart's book is both a gripping narrative on how it was done and a useful guide to how we should regard that wonderful document today."
Since Catherine Drinker Bowen's Miracle at Philadelphia appeared in 1966, no work has challenged its classic status. Now, Stewart's work does. Briskly written, full of deft characterizations and drama, grounded firmly in the records of the Constitutional Convention and its members' letters, this is a splendid rendering of the document's creation. All the debates are here, as are all the convention's personalities. It detracts nothing from Stewart's lively story to point out that it's just that-a tale-and not an interpretation. Stewart, a constitutional lawyer in Washington, D.C., ignores the recent decades' penetrating scholarship about the Constitution's creation in favor of a fast-paced narrative of a long, hot summer's work. Only one choice mars the book. Stewart, like Bowen, wants us to see the four summer months as the only period when the Constitution was created. But as James Madison and others acknowledged soon afterward, the state ratifying conventions and the First Federal Congress, which added the Bill of Rights, also contributed to the Constitution as we know it. Stewart's excellent book will appeal to those looking for descriptive history at its best, not for a fresh take on the subject. B&w illus. (Apr.) Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information.
"At a time that feels to many like the twilight of the Republic, it
is heartening to go back to the dawn and watch the authors of the
Constitution struggle to create a democracy that would endure. In
The Summer of 1787, David O. Stewart re-creates this moment with
fidelity, great feeling, and insight. His book renews our
appreciation of one of the masterpieces of Western civilization and
reminds us, as Benjamin Franklin reminded his colleagues at the
Constitutional Convention, that it was one thing to found a
republic -- and quite another to keep it."--Patricia O'Toole,
author of When Trumpets Call: Theodore Roosevelt After the White
House and The Five of Hearts: An Intimate Portrait of Henry Adams
and His Friends
"Crafting the Constitution was one of the most amazing
collaborations in human history. David O. Stewart's book is both a
gripping narrative on how it was done and a useful guide to how we
should regard that wonderful document today."--Walter Isaacson,
author of Benjamin Franklin and Einstein
"David O. Stewart made clearer to me than ever the tensions and
bargains that produced our Constitution at the Convention of 1787.
Especially the bargain over slavery, with all its terrible, lasting
consequences. It is an irresistible drama."--Anthony Lewis, author
of Gideon's Trumpet
"David O. Stewart's spirited The Summer of 1787 explores a time
when brilliant men -- along with colleagues less acute but often
louder -- hammered out the template for the United States of
America. With indelible vignettes and anecdotes, Stewart reminds us
why those four months in Philadelphia can still shake the
world."--A.J. Langguth, author of Union 1812: The Americans Who
Fought the Second War of Independence
"In this engaging story of the momentous but little-understood
summer that gave us the Constitution, David O. Stewart deftly
reminds us what a close-run thing America was -- and still is.
Stewart's is an important work, written with insight and
verve."--Jon Meacham, author of American Gospel: God, the Founding
Fathers, and the Making of a Nation
"The summer of 1787 may be more than two centuries in our past, but
David O. Stewart makes it wonderfully vivid in this fresh and
gripping account of America's constitutional birth pangs. Instead
of periwigged demigods, Stewart introduces us to fifty-five white
males, whose talent for compromise planted the seeds of
representative democracy in their garden of privilege. This tale
offers the perfect antidote to our own sound-bite and focus-group
politics."--Richard Norton Smith, author of Patriarch: George
Washington and the New American Nation
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