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The author does a good job showing how the evangelical movement of the mid 19th century influenced, and was influenced, the politics surrounding abolition. Most evangelists in the 1830's and 40's followed the "moral suasion" path of the early abolitionists like Garrison. They did not hold that political activism on emancipation was the course to pursue. Evangelists like Charles Finney held that the conversion of souls would bring about reforms on a wide range of social issues like abolition, temperance and others. Others, like Theodore Weld, believed that the pursuit of emancipation should be the express intended outcome of religious activity. The Tappan brothers, supporters of both Finney and Weld, came to share Weld's perspective.

As the tumult over slavery increased, the connection of emancipation and politics changed substantially toward more engagement with politics. Many evangelists took overtly political stands on the issues of the day, particularly migrating their support for the new Republican party. By the time of the war, there was blatant opining from the pulpit on the imperative of the religious to lobby and advocate for the suppression of the rebellious slaveholding South. The obsession with hastening the millennium through social reforms also played a major part in the growing political activism by evangelicals. The author recounts well how the growing connection of pro and anti slavery doctrines caused the splits between northern and southern branches of the major denominations.

Lincoln's views on religion were always somewhat ambiguous. Throughout his life Lincoln was never a member of any church. Early on, he was accused of being at best a Deist and perhaps a nonbeliever. As the burdens of the war came upon him, and certainly after the death of his son Willie, his references to the will of God as influencing the course to take became clear. But, he believed that the intention of God were somewhat inscrutable and that God's plans did not necessarily coalesce entirely with the virtue of the North's causes. His incredible 2nd inaugural address vividly shows how his interpretation of scripture formed his thinking on the meaning of the causes and perpetuation of the war.
 
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stevesmits | Jul 28, 2023 |
The roaring twenties ! Lots of well known flappers discussed, Clara Bow, Coco Chanel, Zelda Fitzgerald . Interesting and fun to read.
 
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loraineo | 15 reseñas más. | Jul 3, 2022 |
How History Gets Shaped

Events happen, such as Lincoln's election as president, the prewar battles, and the Civil War. However, as Zeitz demonstrates, history itself gets shaped. His book is worthwhile as a history of the period, much of it concise and trenchant. His biographies of John Hay and John Nicolay are focused and comprehensive. But it's the characterization of Lincoln, the Lincoln we know, or, as Zeitz puts it, the Lincoln Memorial Lincoln and the revisionist histories of the Civil War most readers will find enlightening.

In the first part of the book, Zeitz covers the early lives of Hay and Nicolay, the foundation of their individual character. Also here, he succinctly and clearly takes readers through the issues leading up to the election of 1860, in particular the various compromises that kept the lid on a boiling cauldron, as well as the machinations of the election process. The rabid partisanship before and after the war will disabuse readers of the notion there is anything singular about current American politics. Along the way, Zeitz offers a few keen observations that still ring true, among them this on postwar prosperity:

"Rarely did it occur to business and political elites that they had not prospered strictly by the rules of the free labor economy. Railroad companies profited heavily from government land grants and financial subsidies. The Timber Culture Act (1873) and the Desert Land Act (1877) gave away millions of acres of public land to those with the means to plant trees and irrigate arid allotments in the Southwest....At every turn, an activist state born of necessity to prosecute the Civil War found new and increasingly inventive ways to subsidize business concerns that had grown out of the same armed struggle. Many of the primary recipients of this public largesse remained oblivious to the role that the government played in making them wealthy."

In the last third, Zeitz shows how Hay and Nicolay, with the support of Robert Lincoln, shaped the President Lincoln we know today, primarily in their serialized and widely read 10-volume biography, Abraham Lincoln: A History, and Nicolay's condensed one-volume version, A Short Life of Abraham Lincoln: Condensed From Nicolay & Hay's Abraham Lincoln: A History. Without them, we might have inherited a different Lincoln, one more shaped by William Herndon, Lincoln's old Springfield law partner, and others, without the pair's first-hand knowledge of Lincoln's true character and witness-to-history status.

While successful in giving us the Lincoln we know today, Hay and Nicolay were less fruitful in preserving the historical perspective that the South rebelled, that a Civil War was fought, and that the central issue leading to conflict was slavery. Revisionism took over for a reason Zeitz explores, leaving us with concepts like The War Between the States, competing economic systems, states rights, brother against brother, and the like.

Finally, Zeitz does an excellent job of illustrating how Hay and Nicolay's attitude on race evolved from when they were young men in pre-Civil War America to when they were older and wiser men. Anti-slavery didn't mean racial equality to them, or Lincoln, or most any anti-slavery advocate. But over time, attitudes changed.

All in all, you'll find it a superb and enlightening excursion into the most crucial period in the Republic's history. Includes footnotes, bibliography, index, and a small collection of photos.
 
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write-review | 6 reseñas más. | Nov 4, 2021 |
How History Gets Shaped

Events happen, such as Lincoln's election as president, the prewar battles, and the Civil War. However, as Zeitz demonstrates, history itself gets shaped. His book is worthwhile as a history of the period, much of it concise and trenchant. His biographies of John Hay and John Nicolay are focused and comprehensive. But it's the characterization of Lincoln, the Lincoln we know, or, as Zeitz puts it, the Lincoln Memorial Lincoln and the revisionist histories of the Civil War most readers will find enlightening.

In the first part of the book, Zeitz covers the early lives of Hay and Nicolay, the foundation of their individual character. Also here, he succinctly and clearly takes readers through the issues leading up to the election of 1860, in particular the various compromises that kept the lid on a boiling cauldron, as well as the machinations of the election process. The rabid partisanship before and after the war will disabuse readers of the notion there is anything singular about current American politics. Along the way, Zeitz offers a few keen observations that still ring true, among them this on postwar prosperity:

"Rarely did it occur to business and political elites that they had not prospered strictly by the rules of the free labor economy. Railroad companies profited heavily from government land grants and financial subsidies. The Timber Culture Act (1873) and the Desert Land Act (1877) gave away millions of acres of public land to those with the means to plant trees and irrigate arid allotments in the Southwest....At every turn, an activist state born of necessity to prosecute the Civil War found new and increasingly inventive ways to subsidize business concerns that had grown out of the same armed struggle. Many of the primary recipients of this public largesse remained oblivious to the role that the government played in making them wealthy."

In the last third, Zeitz shows how Hay and Nicolay, with the support of Robert Lincoln, shaped the President Lincoln we know today, primarily in their serialized and widely read 10-volume biography, Abraham Lincoln: A History, and Nicolay's condensed one-volume version, A Short Life of Abraham Lincoln: Condensed From Nicolay & Hay's Abraham Lincoln: A History. Without them, we might have inherited a different Lincoln, one more shaped by William Herndon, Lincoln's old Springfield law partner, and others, without the pair's first-hand knowledge of Lincoln's true character and witness-to-history status.

While successful in giving us the Lincoln we know today, Hay and Nicolay were less fruitful in preserving the historical perspective that the South rebelled, that a Civil War was fought, and that the central issue leading to conflict was slavery. Revisionism took over for a reason Zeitz explores, leaving us with concepts like The War Between the States, competing economic systems, states rights, brother against brother, and the like.

Finally, Zeitz does an excellent job of illustrating how Hay and Nicolay's attitude on race evolved from when they were young men in pre-Civil War America to when they were older and wiser men. Anti-slavery didn't mean racial equality to them, or Lincoln, or most any anti-slavery advocate. But over time, attitudes changed.

All in all, you'll find it a superb and enlightening excursion into the most crucial period in the Republic's history. Includes footnotes, bibliography, index, and a small collection of photos.
 
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write-review | 6 reseñas más. | Nov 4, 2021 |
I maybe should've lemmed this, but I was interested in the subject matter. The writing just wasn't that great. I mean it jumped from here to there and sometimes I didn't really see the link to the actual subject of the book. Also I maybe was more interested in the flappers as a culture phenomenon than the icons of the flapper era (I rather read biographies for that). It just never got into any depth and I also felt like the writer didn't really appreciate the people he was writing about. So, I want to read more about this particular subject, but not from this author.
 
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RankkaApina | 15 reseñas más. | Feb 22, 2021 |
Yesterday is not ours to recover, but tomorrow is ours to win or lose.
LBJ




Building the Great Society: Inside Lyndon Johnson's White House by Joshua Zeitz is the story of LBJ’s grand plan for the United States. Zeitz is the author of several books on American political and social history and has written for the New York Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, The New Republic, The Atlantic, Dissent, and American Heritage. Zeitz appeared as a commentator on two PBS documentaries – Boomer Century, and Ken Burns' Prohibition — and has commented on public policy matters on CNBC and CNN International. He has held faculty positions at Harvard, Cambridge, and Princeton and is the author of four books.

Today, Johnson is probably more associated with the Vietnam War than with his Great Society. Zeitz looks at the president and his staff along with the Great Society and Civil Rights programs without making Vietnam the central point of the presidency. The war does come into the book near the end, but the primary discussion is not the war. LBJ was a Texan and it showed in some very stereotypical ways. He was gruff and used his power and favors owed to gain what he wanted. He was not above intimidating his staff and opponents. In one example while swimming with one of his senior staff, Johnson stopped at the right spot where his feet firmly touched the bottom of the pool but the shorter staff member needed to tread water while Johnson poked at the staffer’s chest and berated him. Johnson always took a position of power. He also enjoyed panicking guests by driving his (amphibious) car into the lake on his ranch while yelling that the brakes went out.

Johnson could be a bully but he did have a soft spot. He was a teacher in poor, primarily Mexican communities. The racism and poverty had a deep effect on Johnson. America was at its highest point of wealth and industry. The vast richness of the United States should not be squandered. All Americans should benefit. Johnson spoke In a 1965 Speech at the signing of the Higher Education Act in San Marcos, TX:

I shall never forget the faces of the boys and the girls in that little Welhausen Mexican School, and I remember even yet the pain of realizing and knowing then that college was closed to practically every one of those children because they were too poor. And I think it was then that I made up my mind that this nation could never rest while the door to knowledge remained closed to any American.

Johnson worked on many programs that would seem out of place for his public image. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 was a project that evaded Kennedy. Johnson used all his power and influence to push through the Act. It became the starting point for his Great Society Program which became the 1964 campaign slogan. Johnson believed that the Civil Rights Act had cost him and the Democrats the South. Johnson did, in fact, lose the Deep South (and Arizona) to Goldwater but carried the rest of the country. He had a mandate for his Great Society. The Voting Rights Act was pushed through despite resistance from southern leaders. He appointed Thurgood Marshall to the Supreme Court and Robert C. Weaver became the first African-American to hold a cabinet position. Head Start, Food Stamps, National Endowment for the Arts and the Federal Work Study Program all saw their start under Johnson. Medicare, Medicaid, and public broadcasting all saw growth under LBJ. Johnson’s Great Society did not come easily. Congress became conscious of costs, especially with the growing spending on Vietnam, and racial issues in southern states. In the north civil rights was support in word but not always deed. People would pay lip service to civil rights but resist desegregation of schools. Much like the words of Shakespeare’s Mark Antony, Johnson too seemed to have experienced "The evil that men do lives after them; the good is oft interred with their bones.” Vietnam overshadowed the good Johnson accomplished. He felt the unfairness and once remarked:

If one morning I walked on top of the water across the Potomac River, the headline that afternoon would read: "President Can't Swim.".

Zeitz gives the reader an inside look at the Johnson presidency. His staff members and inner workings of the presidential policies are examined in detail. Original source material and first-hand accounts as reference material make this book an excellent account of LBJ’s years as president. Also, moving Vietnam to the backburner allows the read to see the “good” Johnson intended to accomplish with his presidency. Personally, Johnson was far from perfect; professionally, too, he believed the ends sometimes justified the means. An important work on the man who shaped modern liberal policy and improved the lives of many Americans.

Available January 30, 2018
 
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evil_cyclist | otra reseña | Mar 16, 2020 |
Not much new Lincoln history but an engaging expose on Nicolay and Hay. The political and historical analysis was exceptionally top drawer, insightful and relevant.
 
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DonaldPowell | 6 reseñas más. | Feb 5, 2019 |
5588. Building the Great Society Inside Lyndon Johnson's White House, by Joshua Zeitz (read 21 Oct 2018) This book was published in early 2018 and is by an author born in 1974--long after LBJ had left the White House but it does a workmanlike job telling how LBJ came into the presidency determined to accomplish much. He wanted to win big in 1964 and he did and set out to match or outdo FDR's 100 Days. He succeeded in instituting Medicare, which now is as revered as Social Security. He also obtained the Voting Rights bill which did more than anything else to diminish Southern resistance to civil rights, so that racists like George Wallace and Strom Thurmond had to seek black votes. The story of the efforts and tensions in the LBJ White House is well told and one has to regret that the Vietnam War brought LBJ's great work to an end. The book shows that Humphrey might have won in 1968 if the Republicans had not gotten South Vietnam to scuttle the chance for peace in October 1968--causing four more years of war and thousands more deaths.
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Schmerguls | otra reseña | Oct 21, 2018 |
A madcap story of sex, style, celebrity, and the
 
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jhawn | 15 reseñas más. | Jul 31, 2017 |
 
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M_Sawtelle | 15 reseñas más. | Apr 6, 2016 |
This is one of my favorite nonfiction reads! The author does an excellent job of creating the significance and impact of this pivotal era. I was amazed to put together all of the significant changes that occurred in the twenties into one story. I think the author's use of real lives that were key to these changes made the story more real. Though very informative, it is actually a fun read!
 
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Jen.ODriscoll.Lemon | 15 reseñas más. | Jan 23, 2016 |
This is one of my favorite nonfiction reads! The author does an excellent job of creating the significance and impact of this pivotal era. I was amazed to put together all of the significant changes that occurred in the twenties into one story. I think the author's use of real lives that were key to these changes made the story more real. Though very informative, it is actually a fun read!
 
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Jen.ODriscoll.Lemon | 15 reseñas más. | Jan 23, 2016 |
Quite a good summary of Hay and Nicolay's work as Lincoln's secretaries and their great efforts later in life to pen a massive biography of Lincoln. While this is at the center of Zeitz's narrative, he also does an excellent job of removing the pair from Lincoln's shadow - necessary and desirable, since both led interesting lives in their own right.
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JBD1 | 6 reseñas más. | Mar 14, 2015 |
Welcome to Great Moments with Mr. Lincolns… Friends. Zeitz wants to showcase Lincoln’s two secretaries, (and later important statesmen of their own right,) John Hay and John Nicolay and their contributions to Lincoln’s legacy. The first part of the book their lives are understandably intertwined with Lincoln, but later are shown in their own careers and the putting together of their biography of Lincoln. The interweaving of the hot button issues of the day and the work of Hay and Nicolay is seamlessly handled and provides a welcome addition to world of Lincoln studies.

Free review copy.
 
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mrmapcase | 6 reseñas más. | Feb 6, 2014 |
I had to read this book for a book club and it took me all month to read it. It was so loaded with facts that it teetered on the edge of sounding like someone's dissertation. I would have liked more focus on the lives of the 4 women credited with the flapper mystic and less historical facts. The end of the book was actually the best part for me.
 
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bamckay | 15 reseñas más. | Sep 30, 2012 |
This is a wonderful book if you are interested in delving into the history of America in the 1920's. One of many chapters which I have enjoyed so far one in particular is about Lois Long, who was the resident flapper journalist (according to the author) on the staff of The New Yorker Magazine. She wrote under the pseudonym of "Lipstick" and chronicled her excursions in New York City. This book offers delightful, historical insights into the modus operandi of the incorrigible yet bedazzling 1920's flapper.
 
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livretoujours | 15 reseñas más. | Oct 6, 2011 |
Interesting during the first few chapters.
 
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LiteraryW | 15 reseñas más. | Sep 13, 2010 |
The subtitle of this book is A Madcap Story of Sex, Style, Celebrity, and the Women Who Made America Modern. This book, a social and cultural history of the iconic flapper, is indeed just that. It explores the authors, actresses, illustrators, magazine columnists, advertising executives, and newspaper columnists that defined the flapper of the 1920s, a girl who “was always a caricature—one part fiction one part reality, with a splash of melodrama for good measure…she was a broad and sometimes overdrawn social category” (p. 123).

This is a highly readable and compelling work of nonfiction, and a broad introduction to the period. The author covers everything—literally, everything—to give his readers a broad picture of the period and what made the flapper who she was—more of an image that women aspired to than anything else. Zeitz discusses several of the people who helped define the flapper image, among them F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald, whose antics were famous throughout America and Europe; the actresses Colleen Moore, Clara Bow, and Louise Brooks; and Coco Chanel, famous for setting trends and inventing the little black dress.

There are lots of really interesting bits about the rise of advertising as a major business and women’s fashion not just in the early 20th century but the 19th as well. I also was interested in what early feminists and suffragettes thought of the flapper—not what I would have thought! This book is well researched, and seems a little bit gossipy at times (especially with regards to Louise Brooks, who makes Zelda Fitzgerald look like Mary Sue in comparison), but that’s the whole fun of the book. There are black and white reproductions of photographs from the era of the major players mentioned in this book. This book is definitely recommended for anyone who wants a general introduction to the 1920s and its culture.
 
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Kasthu | 15 reseñas más. | Jun 4, 2010 |
An overall enjoyable book, I liked how they covered a wide variety of different aspects of the culture of that era and used the Flapper and her image to tie it all together. It was well written and very engaging and approachable. I liked the photographs they showed and wish they could have included more.

My one complaint is the heavy focus on the Fitzgerald's. They may have been a big influence on the culture of the time, but they were hardly the main one and it could have done with a little less on them and more on a wider variety of people.
 
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Kellswitch | 15 reseñas más. | Mar 1, 2010 |
Not a fast read - this book is dense with facts. But it's well-organized and easy to read. I really love the insights presented - the author builds a compelling description of how the changes before and during the flapper era went far to make American culture what it is today.
 
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bethlakshmi | 15 reseñas más. | Dec 11, 2009 |
Great reading about coming out of the Victoria era from all angels: literary; fashion; writing, etc.
 
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pharrm | 15 reseñas más. | Sep 21, 2009 |
The flapper was the first modern American woman. She cut her hair, wore short skirts, smoked, drank, danced, and kept up with men. She went out to get what she wanted and rejected the notions of her mother and grandmother. This is a light history of the flapper movement, along with stories of famous flappers such as Zelda Fitzgerald and Clara Bow. It is an interesting look at a decade that was in many ways the first modern decade.
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apartmentcarpet | 15 reseñas más. | Aug 5, 2008 |
In this extremely accessible and far from dry (in many senses of the word) cultural history, Joshua Zeitz captures the zeitgeist of the 20s, an era where liberty was measured more in material things than in personal rights. Each section is framed with anecdotes about influential characters and institutions like F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald, Lois Long from the early days of "The New Yorker," fashion phenom Coco Chanel, and silver screen stars Louise Brooks, Colleen Moore, and Clara Bow. Whether portraying the flapper phenomenon through the lens of sexuality, feminism, race, or popular culture, Zeitz has given us a complete and compelling read. -Emily
 
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skylightbooks | 15 reseñas más. | Feb 6, 2008 |
Okay look at 1920s America and the sweeping social changes that gripped the nation.½
 
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lysimache | 15 reseñas más. | Jul 5, 2007 |
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