It is interesting that only after more than two hundred years have past may we begin to understand how critical was the role that John Adams played in our nations birth. The belief for his lack of recognition is twofold. First, by his own account he wasn't a pleasant man to be in company with. He usually avoided one on one personal encounters because his lack of "felicity of expression".
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Title: John Adams: A Life || Author: John Ferling || ISDN: 0-80504-576-7 || Released: June 1996 | |
If you are interested in learning more about our John Adams, this is one of the best works ever written on him. John Ferling did an extraordinary biography using facts, not fiction in altering our original conception of our second president. Historians of late seem to be elevating Adams' importance to beyond that of Jefferson and this book along with several others make a strong case for it. |
Title: John Adams || Author: David McCullough || ISDN: 0-68481-363-7 || Released: May 2001 | |
Overshadowed by the lustrous presidents Washington and Jefferson, who bracketed his tenure in office, Adams emerges from McCullough's brilliant biography as a truly heroic figure--not only for his significant role in the American Revolution but also for maintaining his personal integrity in its strife-filled aftermath. McCullough spends much of his narrative examining the troubled friendship between Adams and Jefferson, who had in common a love for books and ideas but differed on almost every other imaginable point. Reading his pages, it is easy to imagine the two as alter egos. (Strangely, both died on the same day, the 50th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence.) But McCullough also considers Adams in his own light, and the portrait that emerges is altogether fascinating |
Title: Passionate Sage: The Character and Legacy of John Adams || Author: Joseph Ellis || ISDN: 0-39331-133-3 || Released: September 1994 | |
The felicitously written book has done a great deal to raise John Adams' reputation among the general public. Ellis concentrates on Adams' retirement years with chapters on his political writings, his correspondence with Jefferson, his other friendships, and his family life. While Ellis' goal is to explore Adams' character, this book necessarily covers Adams' remarkable achievements and explains clearly Adams' contributions as a political thinker. Adams was a complex figure; warm-hearted, sometimes vituperative, an unsystematic thinker and writer and thinker with remarkable insights. Adams refusal to accept the somewhat facile conventions of Jeffersonian liberalism made him an anachronism but his skepticism about American exceptionalism proved prescient. Adams was also remarkably accurate in major policy decisions. Over and over again, he made the right choice, even when his choices were unpopular. |
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