Editorial
Reviews
Malcolm Jones, Newsweek
Excellent. . . . Sublime. . . . [An] illuminating
portrait of a quintessential, and perennially
contemporary, American spirit.
Jay Tolson, U.S. News and World Report
[An] excellent portrait . . . by the distinguished
Yale historian Edmund Morgan.
Thomas Fleming, The New York Sun
Spellbinding, . . . beautifully written.
. . . We come away from this superb book
admiring Franklin in a new, more profound
way. --This text refers to the Hardcover
edition.
Louis P. Masur, Chicago Times Book Review
A luminous biography, . . . the essence
of a remarkable life. --This text refers
to the Hardcover edition.
William
F. Gavin, Washington Times
...[A] superb introduction to Franklin's...intellect,
shrewdness, common-sense, good will, and...'innate
affinity for people of all kinds. --This
text refers to the Hardcover edition.
Walter
Russell Mead, Foreign Affairs
...[C]oncise, excellent, and eminently
readable...[A] book ...much like its hero:
...fluent,...engaging...self-effacing...[with]
true breadth and scope. --This text refers
to the Hardcover edition.
New
York Times Book Review
An eminent historian portrays Franklin
as a magnetic extrovert. . . . --This
text refers to the Hardcover edition.
(Joseph
J. Ellis, London Review of Books)
. . . . [A] book that crowns [Morgan’s]
career. . . . [No] previous biograph[y]
rivals Morgan's study for its grasp of
Franklin's character. --This text refers
to the Hardcover edition.
Josephine
Pacheco, The Key Reporter (Phi Beta Kappa)
"Morgan . . . brings his skill and
knowledge to a thoughtful and well-written
biography of a great man." --This
text refers to the Hardcover edition.
Jay
Tolson, U.S. News and World Report
[An] excellent portrait . . . by the distinguished
Yale historian Edmund Morgan. --This text
refers to the Hardcover edition.
From
Publishers Weekly
This wonderful biography of an extraordinary
man results from a perfect marriage of
subject and scholar. Among the most senior
of our senior historians, Yale professor
emeritus Morgan (American Slavery, American
Freedom, etc.) proves himself still at
the height of his powers. While Franklin
remains, as Morgan writes, elusive and
hard to know because "it is so hard
to distinguish his natural impulses from
his principles," the author probably
comes as close to understanding him as
anyone can. Rather than focusing on Franklin's
role as classic, representative American,
Morgan instead gives us a portrait of
his public life, almost a third of it
spent abroad, in England and France, more
than any comparable figure of his generation.
In Morgan's hands, Franklin therefore
turns out to be more cosmopolitan than
provincial, more worldly than Pennsylvanian.
He also shines in this biography as someone
deeply committed to his fellow Americans
and the nation they were creating. Many
previous biographers have sought to explain
how Franklin helped lay the foundations
for a distinctive American mind and personality.
Morgan instead takes us more into Franklin's
thinking and activities as diplomat and
politician and into the way his winning
personality served his country so well
at the moment it needed him. While suitably
critical when Franklin deserves criticism,
Morgan's bravura performance is nevertheless
a buoyant appreciation of a man whose
fame as aphorist in Poor Richard's Almanack
and as the scientist who helped discover
electricity have often obscured his devotion
to the public good. It's hard to imagine
a better life study of a man we've all
heard about but who is barely known. 20
illus.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information,
Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover
edition.
From
School Library Journal
Adult/High School-Through the simple admission
that this biography is meant primarily
to introduce Franklin to the general reading
public, Morgan avoids the biographer's
dilemma of choosing between a narrative
focus or presenting a comprehensive history
of a subject. He begins with an overview
that seeks to educe Franklin's character
through an examination of the principles
and ideas of this early American Renaissance
man as expressed across the board in the
various parts of his life. Yet, it is
not Franklin the Renaissance man, but
rather Franklin the Founding Father of
whom Morgan is writing, arguing persuasively
that this was the role to which the statesman
was most devoted. In telling this story,
the author creates a vivid narrative,
an adventure story of sorts, which grabs
readers with the tale of his subject's
part in the political developments of
18th-century America. Yet, the author
never loses sight of the importance of
the other aspects of the man's personality
and the thoughts and actions of others
toward him. This is the key to this biography's
success: it engages readers' interest
in the great drama of this fascinating
man's life. Teens may well begin here,
and have material enough, but this fascinating
introduction could entice them to look
further.
Ted Westervelt, Library of Congress, Washington,
DC
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information,
Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover
edition.
From
Library Journal
Morgan (Sterling Professor of History,
emeritus, Yale), the award-winning author
of numerous books, including Inventing
the People: The Rise of Popular Sovereignty
in England and America, here offers the
best short biography of Franklin ever
written. He is ideally suited to the task.
For many years, he has chaired the administrative
board that oversees the ongoing work on
The Papers of Benjamin Franklin (Yale
Univ., 36 volumes to date), making this
the first biography whose author can claim
to have read virtually everything ever
written by or to Franklin. Without denying
Franklin's flaws, Morgan expresses affection
and admiration for his subject throughout.
He argues forcefully that Franklin's chief
goal was to live a "useful"
life, showing that Franklin held public
service above his lucrative career as
a printer and the fame he achieved as
a scientist. Morgan deftly shows how Franklin's
desire to serve the public good occasionally
led him to support ideas at variance with
his personal views. The chief virtue of
this book is also its chief flaw. Morgan's
almost exclusive reliance on Franklin's
papers gives the reader an unparalleled
glimpse into Franklin's mind. Yet by keeping
the story so closely tied to Franklin,
the author sometimes gives too little
attention to other persons and to the
general social and political context.
Moreover, he never discusses how his views
compare with those of others, such as
David McCullough (John Adams) and H.W.
Brands (The First American: The Life and
Times of Benjamin Franklin). Nevertheless,
the general reader will find this book
to be a well-written, thoughtful appreciation
of one of the Founding Fathers who did
the most to shape his era and our own.
Highly recommended for all public libraries.
T.J. Schaeper, St. Bonaventure Univ.,
NY
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information,
Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover
edition.
From
Booklist
In getting to know Franklin, the author
relied on two sources: his own erudition
cultivated over a distinguished career
as a historian (Morgan has won the most
prestigious prizes for works of American
history), and The Papers of Benjamin Franklin,
a monumental project of scholarship still
in progress. Morgan adopts a chronological
approach from which he often departs for
expansive discussions of Franklin's occupational
arenas--printing, morals, science, politics,
and diplomacy--through which Franklin
expressed his attitude toward life. That
one's attitude eventually evolves to a
settled view is probably true of every
person, but perhaps it is expressed in
no one more interestingly than in Franklin.
A youthful flirtation with a philosophy
of amoralism, Morgan relates, matured
to Franklin's fundamental precept that
one's life must be useful and that one
should not give in to passions that would
impede one's value to friends, to knowledge,
and to country. An astute appraisal of
a Founder, Morgan's work is less than
a biography but more than a character
profile, and will be of interest to history
buffs. Gilbert Taylor
Copyright © American Library Association.
All rights reserved --This text refers
to the Hardcover edition. |