With his riveting, enlightening accounts of subjects from Johnstown Flood to John Adams, David McCullough has become the historian that Americans look to most to tell us our own story. In his Amazon.com interview, McCullough explains why he turned in his new book from the political battles of the Revolution to the battles on the ground, and he marvels at some of his favorite young citizen soldiers who fought alongside the remarkable General Washington.
From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Bestselling historian and two-time Pulitzer winner McCullough follows up John Adams by staying with America's founding, focusing on a year rather than an individual: a momentous 12 months in the fight for independence. How did a group of ragtag farmers defeat the world's greatest empire? As McCullough vividly shows, they did it with a great deal of suffering, determination, ingenuity—and, the author notes, luck.Although brief by McCullough's standards, this is a narrative tour de force, exhibiting all the hallmarks the author is known for: fascinating subject matter, expert research and detailed, graceful prose. Throughout, McCullough deftly captures both sides of the conflict. The British commander, Lord General Howe, perhaps not fully accepting that the rebellion could succeed, underestimated the Americans' ingenuity. In turn, the outclassed Americans used the cover of night, surprise and an abiding hunger for victory to astonishing effect. Henry Knox, for example, trekked 300 miles each way over harsh winter terrain to bring 120,000 pounds of artillery from Fort Ticonderoga to Boston, enabling the Americans, in a stealthy nighttime advance, to seize Dorchester Heights, thus winning the whole city.Luck, McCullough writes, also played into the American cause—a vicious winter storm, for example, stalled a British counterattack at Boston, and twice Washington staged improbable, daring escapes when the war could have been lost. Similarly, McCullough says, the cruel northeaster in which Washington's troops famously crossed the Delaware was both "a blessing and a curse." McCullough keenly renders the harshness of the elements, the rampant disease and the constant supply shortfalls, from gunpowder to food, that affected morale on both sides—and it certainly didn't help the British that it took six weeks to relay news to and from London. Simply put, this is history writing at its best from one of its top practitioners.
發表於2025-03-22
1776 2025 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
這不是一部曆史教材。如果一定要分類,勉強可以算國內的所謂“紀實文學”。但是其曆史性、文學性和思想性都到達瞭一個相當的高度。我把它叫做“一年史”,是因為從題材上講,它跟黃仁宇的《萬曆十五年》都是取曆史長河中有特點的一年,加以詳述。 第一,曆史性:David McCullo...
評分It is an amazing book by David McCullough who has won his Pulitzer Prize by the book of "John Adams". As an historian, McCullough concentrated on not only the astronomical (at least to me) collection of facts and evidence but also the organization of them...
評分 評分 評分圖書標籤: 曆史 美國 獨立戰爭 華盛頓 History 紐約時報非虛構暢銷書 公共圖書館 English
最渣的同時也是最好的領袖……
評分Detailed history of Independence war just in 1776. Focused on Washington and his continental army.
評分黎明前的黑暗。
評分書是很好的書,故事的收放都很好,沒有刻意塑造偶像,各種引文穿插得也很流暢。但整本書是講1776年的華盛頓與英軍交戰,並未對潘恩的《常識》,《獨立宣言》的起草做交待。有點過於單綫條,缺乏全局視角。這樣一來,獨立史又變成瞭戰爭中的英雄史。
評分McCullough的代錶作之一,確實不錯。他的曆史書寫的像小說。
1776 2025 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載