Caro’s Johnson
I have reviewed Robert Caro’s new book on Lyndon Johnson for the Washington Independent Review of Books. Link to the review is here: http://www.washingtonindependentreviewofbooks.com/bookreview/the-passage-of-power-the-years-of-lyndon-johnson/ I realize that my criticisms of Caro’s footnotes may seem petty. Ultimately, though, footnotes are what distinguish history from historical fiction, and Caro sometimes does not seem sufficiently concerned about that…
Read MoreMock Trial Nationals
I am just back this evening from Albequerque, where Phillips Exeter competed for the first time in the national high school mock trial championship. Essentially every state in the nation was represented, along with a few other places: Guam, Korea, Australia, etc. Since each team consists of at least eight, and more often about twelve…
Read MoreSeward and the States
I am working this morning on a summary of Seward’s relations with the various states, and realizing that there is almost no state which Seward did not visit. Not many northern politicians ever visited the South, but Seward lived in Georgia as a young man and visited Louisiana, Georgia, South Carolina, and other southern states…
Read MoreWilliam Howard Russell
William Howard Russell was already a famous war correspondent when he arrived in the United States in March 1861, intent on covering the imminent American civil war. Russell traveled widely over the next year, leaving in April 1862, and then published in London in 1863 a book he entitled “My Diary North and South.” The…
Read MoreTarbell, Thomas and Burlingame
I am reading this morning a wonderful little book: “Lincoln’s Humor” and Other Essays, by Benjamin Thomas. It is a collection of essays by Thomas, one of the great Lincoln biographers, edited and published after his death by another great Lincoln biographer, Michael Burlingame. One of the essays deals with yet another Lincoln biographer: Ida…
Read MoreEarly 1837
Seward’s letters to his first and best friend, Thurlow Weed, are an invaluable source for his biographer. The letters survive, in the original, in the files at the University of Rochester. I reviewed hundreds of the Seward-Weed letters myself; many others were reviewed and “transcribed” by my great research assistant Kristi Martin; others were printed…
Read MoreWriter’s Quotation Book
One of the advantages of living in two places is that the pleasure of “coming home” to books in the “other place.” We were in our Virginia home for a few days this month, and I found a number of books that I had not seen or read in years. One of them, a particular…
Read MoreSeward as Speechwriter
What follows is an email I sent to Michael Gerson, former speechwriter for the second George Bush, reacting to a line in an article in today’s Washington Post. Dear Mr. Gerson: I enjoyed your article in this morning’s Washington Post and I agree with your main point: presidents and candidates should use speechwriters. Perhaps this…
Read MorePre-Book Seward Event
I have had my first Seward book event, or “pre-book event,” because the book is not out yet. It was a small event for friends of the MIND Institute, a California educational charity. As I said at the outset of the event, it was very fitting, given how strongly Seward believed in education. Education, he…
Read MoreFebruary 29, 1860
I have missed, by a day, posting about Seward’s great speech of February 29, 1860, on February 29, 2012. By early 1860, Seward was the presumptive Republican nominee. If there had been Intrade odds in those days, Seward would have been trading at 80% with all other Republican candidates, including Lincoln, adding up to the…
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