Becoming Lincoln

Author:   William W. Freehling
Publisher:   University of Virginia Press
ISBN:  

9780813941561


Pages:   376
Publication Date:   30 August 2018
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Becoming Lincoln


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Author:   William W. Freehling
Publisher:   University of Virginia Press
Imprint:   University of Virginia Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.50cm , Height: 3.30cm , Length: 23.60cm
Weight:   0.700kg
ISBN:  

9780813941561


ISBN 10:   0813941563
Pages:   376
Publication Date:   30 August 2018
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

In this quietly passionate and deeply learned book, the great William Freehling offers us a compelling portrait of the most dominant yet perennially elusive of Americans: Abraham Lincoln. As the leading historian of the road to disunion, Freehling has, in a way, spent decades building toward this subject, and the result is a delight to read. --Jon Meacham, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House Built on Freehling's vast knowledge of the time period, this commendable biography shows the geographical division of opinions leading up to war and the life events that made the man who saved the union.... A must for every Civil War library. --Kirkus Reviews (starred review) This important book proves that something new can indeed be said about Lincoln's antebellum career. Freehling deftly shows how the future Emancipator fused his early economic and political nationalism with a moral detestation of slavery to become the Republican leader of 1860. The narrative skillfully portrays how Lincoln learned from political mistakes and misfortunes to recover from repeated defeats and attain the greatest prize of all. --James M. McPherson, Princeton University, is the author most recently of The War That Made a Nation: Why the Civil War Still Matters The eloquent and touching story William Freehling tells here reveals an ambitious, struggling Abraham Lincoln, emerging in all his human complexity. It is a surprising story of a man we thought we knew. --Edward L. Ayers, Lincoln Prize-winning author of The Thin Light of Freedom: The Civil War and Emancipation in the Heart of America


Becoming Lincoln reveals a principled politician who tried to reconcile short-term partisan needs with consequential long-term national goals...Freehling adroitly charts his own course through a minefield of contradictory evidence... [I]nsiders will see how his multidimensional Lincoln harmonizes disparate interpretations. --Daniel W. Crofts, author of Civil War Book Review [A]n especially shrewd account of Lincoln's political formation.... To read along in such a chronicle is like watching an expert carver give shape to something otherwise formless or burdened by a profusion of material. Excess is cut away, leaving a clean narrative that is bracing in its directness. The facts of Lincoln's pre-Cviil War years--his rise from a Kentucky log cabin to the presidency, his years as an Illinois politician and lawyer, and his experiences as a husband and father--come newly alive, not least thanks to Mr. Freehling's accessible, sometimes tart, style. --author of Wall Street Journal After a lifetime devoted to the study of proslavery radicalism, William Freehling... has produced a characteristically audacious study of Abraham Lincoln. In his telling, Lincoln's life is a series of ups and downs, promising starts, crushing failures, and impressive recoveries.... No revisionist ever cast such an unflinching eye on the horrors of slavery. In half a dozen important books and thousands of pages of deeply researched scholarship, Freehling has traced the rise of an arrogant slaveholding aristocracy whose destruction was necessary for the preservation of American democracy. --author of New York Review of Books Built on Freehling's vast knowledge of the time period, this commendable biography shows the geographical division of opinions leading up to war and the life events that made the man who saved the union.... A must for every Civil War library. --author of Kirkus Reviews (starred review) In Becoming Lincoln, Freehling (emer., humanities, Univ. of Kentucky) shows how Lincoln learned to become a skilled political operative by highlighting events in Lincoln's pre-presidential political career that show how Lincoln learned from both his successes and his failures.... A very readable and well-argued volume, Becoming Lincoln will become a standard in Lincoln biographies. --author of CHOICE In this quietly passionate and deeply learned book, the great William Freehling offers us a compelling portrait of the most dominant yet perennially elusive of Americans: Abraham Lincoln. As the leading historian of the road to disunion, Freehling has, in a way, spent decades building toward this subject, and the result is a delight to read. --Jon Meacham, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House The eloquent and touching story William Freehling tells here reveals an ambitious, struggling Abraham Lincoln, emerging in all his human complexity. It is a surprising story of a man we thought we knew. --Edward L. Ayers, Lincoln Prize-winning author of The Thin Light of Freedom: The Civil War and Emancipation in the Heart of America This captivating book focuses on Lincoln's journey to the presidency... The author of The Road to Disunion, Freehling considers Lincoln's thoughts of and his relationship with his father and his failures. This relationship, Professor Freehling argues, is the driving force behind Lincoln's constant effort to excel in his work. --author of Civil War Book Review This important book proves that something new can indeed be said about Lincoln's antebellum career. Freehling deftly shows how the future Emancipator fused his early economic and political nationalism with a moral detestation of slavery to become the Republican leader of 1860. The narrative skillfully portrays how Lincoln learned from political mistakes and misfortunes to recover from repeated defeats and attain the greatest prize of all. --James M. McPherson, Princeton University, is the author most recently of The War That Made a Nation: Why the Civil War Still Matters


Becoming Lincoln reveals a principled politician who tried to reconcile short-term partisan needs with consequential long-term national goals...Freehling adroitly charts his own course through a minefield of contradictory evidence... [I]nsiders will see how his multidimensional Lincoln harmonizes disparate interpretations. --Daniel W. Crofts Civil War Book Review [A]n especially shrewd account of Lincoln's political formation.... To read along in such a chronicle is like watching an expert carver give shape to something otherwise formless or burdened by a profusion of material. Excess is cut away, leaving a clean narrative that is bracing in its directness. The facts of Lincoln's pre-Cviil War years--his rise from a Kentucky log cabin to the presidency, his years as an Illinois politician and lawyer, and his experiences as a husband and father--come newly alive, not least thanks to Mr. Freehling's accessible, sometimes tart, style. --Wall Street Journal In Becoming Lincoln, Freehling (emer., humanities, Univ. of Kentucky) shows how Lincoln learned to become a skilled political operative by highlighting events in Lincoln's pre-presidential political career that show how Lincoln learned from both his successes and his failures.... A very readable and well-argued volume, Becoming Lincoln will become a standard in Lincoln biographies. --CHOICE Built on Freehling's vast knowledge of the time period, this commendable biography shows the geographical division of opinions leading up to war and the life events that made the man who saved the union.... A must for every Civil War library. --Kirkus Reviews (starred review) This important book proves that something new can indeed be said about Lincoln's antebellum career. Freehling deftly shows how the future Emancipator fused his early economic and political nationalism with a moral detestation of slavery to become the Republican leader of 1860. The narrative skillfully portrays how Lincoln learned from political mistakes and misfortunes to recover from repeated defeats and attain the greatest prize of all. --James M. McPherson, Princeton University, is the author most recently of The War That Made a Nation: Why the Civil War Still Matters The eloquent and touching story William Freehling tells here reveals an ambitious, struggling Abraham Lincoln, emerging in all his human complexity. It is a surprising story of a man we thought we knew. --Edward L. Ayers, Lincoln Prize-winning author of The Thin Light of Freedom: The Civil War and Emancipation in the Heart of America In this quietly passionate and deeply learned book, the great William Freehling offers us a compelling portrait of the most dominant yet perennially elusive of Americans: Abraham Lincoln. As the leading historian of the road to disunion, Freehling has, in a way, spent decades building toward this subject, and the result is a delight to read. --Jon Meacham, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House


Built on Freehling's vast knowledge of the time period, this commendable biography shows the geographical division of opinions leading up to war and the life events that made the man who saved the union.... A must for every Civil War library. --Kirkus Reviews (starred review) This important book proves that something new can indeed be said about Lincoln's antebellum career. Freehling deftly shows how the future Emancipator fused his early economic and political nationalism with a moral detestation of slavery to become the Republican leader of 1860. The narrative skillfully portrays how Lincoln learned from political mistakes and misfortunes to recover from repeated defeats and attain the greatest prize of all. --James M. McPherson, Princeton University, is the author most recently of The War That Made a Nation: Why the Civil War Still Matters The eloquent and touching story William Freehling tells here reveals an ambitious, struggling Abraham Lincoln, emerging in all his human complexity. It is a surprising story of a man we thought we knew. --Edward L. Ayers, Lincoln Prize-winning author of The Thin Light of Freedom: The Civil War and Emancipation in the Heart of America In this quietly passionate and deeply learned book, the great William Freehling offers us a compelling portrait of the most dominant yet perennially elusive of Americans: Abraham Lincoln. As the leading historian of the road to disunion, Freehling has, in a way, spent decades building toward this subject, and the result is a delight to read. --Jon Meacham, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House


After a lifetime devoted to the study of proslavery radicalism, William Freehling... has produced a characteristically audacious study of Abraham Lincoln. In his telling, Lincoln's life is a series of ups and downs, promising starts, crushing failures, and impressive recoveries.... No revisionist ever cast such an unflinching eye on the horrors of slavery. In half a dozen important books and thousands of pages of deeply researched scholarship, Freehling has traced the rise of an arrogant slaveholding aristocracy whose destruction was necessary for the preservation of American democracy. --New York Review of Books Becoming Lincoln reveals a principled politician who tried to reconcile short-term partisan needs with consequential long-term national goals...Freehling adroitly charts his own course through a minefield of contradictory evidence... [I]nsiders will see how his multidimensional Lincoln harmonizes disparate interpretations. --Daniel W. Crofts Civil War Book Review [A]n especially shrewd account of Lincoln's political formation.... To read along in such a chronicle is like watching an expert carver give shape to something otherwise formless or burdened by a profusion of material. Excess is cut away, leaving a clean narrative that is bracing in its directness. The facts of Lincoln's pre-Cviil War years--his rise from a Kentucky log cabin to the presidency, his years as an Illinois politician and lawyer, and his experiences as a husband and father--come newly alive, not least thanks to Mr. Freehling's accessible, sometimes tart, style. --Wall Street Journal In Becoming Lincoln, Freehling (emer., humanities, Univ. of Kentucky) shows how Lincoln learned to become a skilled political operative by highlighting events in Lincoln's pre-presidential political career that show how Lincoln learned from both his successes and his failures.... A very readable and well-argued volume, Becoming Lincoln will become a standard in Lincoln biographies. --CHOICE Built on Freehling's vast knowledge of the time period, this commendable biography shows the geographical division of opinions leading up to war and the life events that made the man who saved the union.... A must for every Civil War library. --Kirkus Reviews (starred review) This important book proves that something new can indeed be said about Lincoln's antebellum career. Freehling deftly shows how the future Emancipator fused his early economic and political nationalism with a moral detestation of slavery to become the Republican leader of 1860. The narrative skillfully portrays how Lincoln learned from political mistakes and misfortunes to recover from repeated defeats and attain the greatest prize of all. --James M. McPherson, Princeton University, is the author most recently of The War That Made a Nation: Why the Civil War Still Matters The eloquent and touching story William Freehling tells here reveals an ambitious, struggling Abraham Lincoln, emerging in all his human complexity. It is a surprising story of a man we thought we knew. --Edward L. Ayers, Lincoln Prize-winning author of The Thin Light of Freedom: The Civil War and Emancipation in the Heart of America In this quietly passionate and deeply learned book, the great William Freehling offers us a compelling portrait of the most dominant yet perennially elusive of Americans: Abraham Lincoln. As the leading historian of the road to disunion, Freehling has, in a way, spent decades building toward this subject, and the result is a delight to read. --Jon Meacham, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House


Author Information

William W. Freehling is Singletary Professor of the Humanities Emeritus at the University of Kentucky and the author of the two-volume Road to Disunion and the Bancroft Award-winning Prelude to Civil War: The Nullification Controversy in South Carolina, 1816-1830.

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