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Meriwether Lewis
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About the Author

Thomas C. Danisi (St. Louis, MO) and John C. Jackson (Olympia, WA) are freelance writers and historians. In 2004, they received a grant from the Lewis and Clark Trail Heritage Foundation to research this book. Danisi is the author of Uncovering the Truth about Meriwether Lewis and numerous articles on the history surrounding Meri-wether Lewis and the Lewis and Clark Expedition. Jackson is the author of four books on the history of the Pacific Northwest, including By Honor and Right: How One Man Boldly Defined the Destiny of a Nation.

Reviews

"Meriwether Lewis was famous for two things: leading the Corps of Discovery expedition (1804-06) and committing suicide. Danisi and Jackson (The Piikani Blackfeet: A Culture Under Siege) focus on Lewis's life before the expedition and his term as governor of the Louisiana Territory thereafter. By contrast, Stephen E. Ambrose's Undaunted Courage focuses on the expedition and Lewis's suicide. Danisi and Jackson introduce readers to the rough and tumble of Louisiana Territory politics, both internationally (Spanish territory to the southwest, British to the north and on the seas) and locally, including confusing French-Spanish land claims and relations with various Indian tribes. Through exhaustive, well-sourced research, the authors demonstrate Lewis's competent management of the territory until days before his death in October 1809, highlighting the bitter political battles and indifferent Washington bureaucrats and clearly refuting claims of diminished mental capabilities. They further confirm that Lewis suffered from recurring bouts of malaria, reinforcing a sense of his suffering as a motive for suicide. Whatever the cause of Lewis's early death, the nation has struggled to accept that a hero's life was cut short. This excellent biography does much to let the man shine forth. Highly recommended." -- Margaret Atwater-Singer, Univ, of Evansville Libs., IN "Danisi and Jackson focus on Lewis's life before the expedition and his term as governor of the Louisiana Territory thereafter. Danisi and Jackson introduce readers to the rough and tumble of Louisiana Territory politics, both internationally and locally. Through exhaustive, well-sourced research, the authors demonstrate Lewis's competent management of the territory until days before his death in October 1809, highlighting the bitter political battles and indifferent Washington bureaucrats and clearly refuting claims of diminished mental capabilities. They further confirm that Lewis suffered from recurring bouts of malaria, reinforcing a sense of his suffering as a motive for suicide. Whatever the cause of Lewis's early death, the nation has struggled to accept that a hero's life was cut short. This excellent biography does much to let the man shine forth. Highly recommended." -- Library Journal starred review, March 15, 2009 "Independent historians Danisi and Jackson offer a meticulously researched, if occasionally obsessive, account of Meriwether Lewis's life, focused primarily on the tragically short years after the famous Lewis and Clark expedition of 1804 -1806. The authors propose the novel but credible theory that Lewis's mysterious 1809 death, generally considered a suicide, was a result of unwitting self-poisoning with mercury treatments for his recurring, debilitating bouts of malaria. In the process, the authors also effectively debunk conspiracy theorists' suggestions that Lewis was murdered. After the expedition, Lewis served as governor of the Louisiana territory, was embroiled in the convoluted and harsh politics of the territory and worked sedulously on Indian affairs. Well researched and insightful, this work is likely to be appreciated by professional historians and Lewis and Clark enthusiasts." -- Publishers Weekly, January 19, 2009 "The man that emerges in this story is one of honorable intentions and who handled difficult confrontations with patience and diplomacy. The mystery surrounding his death, whether it was murder or suicide, is also put to rest. We tend to forget or not even know the great debt the nation owes to such men." -- Bookviews, June 2009 (also posted to ReaditNews.com, June 8, 2009) "It's hard to believe that Thomas Danisi and John Jackson have written the first comprehensive, full-length biography of Meriwether Lewis in fifty years, but it's true. Danisi and Jackson wade into [the] controversy with fists flying, and to my mind they explain every aspect of Lewis' death beyond cavil or reconsideration. Danisi and Jackson have done enough research on the question to satisfy anybody who's ever going to be satisfied. this is exactly the kind of lively, exceedingly intelligent, accessibly-written Life & Times that every great figure in history deserves. We'll never know what kind of a book Lewis could have written if he'd had ample time and ample health with which to do so, but we know what kind of a book Danisi and Jackson have written: meaty, entertaining, and best of all, definitive." -- Open Letters, May 2009

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