Record Details
Book cover

Abraham Lincoln

Keneally, Thomas. (Author).
Book  - 2003
973.7092 Linco -K
1 copy / 0 on hold

Available Copies by Location

Location
Victoria Available
  • ISBN: 0670031755
  • Physical Description 183 pages.
  • Publisher New York : Viking Penguin, 2003.

Content descriptions

General Note:
"A Penguin life."
"A Lipper/Viking book."
Bibliography, etc. Note:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 177-183).
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note:
LSC 30.00

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 0670031755
Lincoln
Lincoln
by Keneally, Thomas
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Publishers Weekly Review

Lincoln

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Keneally offers up a new volume in the popular Penguin Lives series of short biographies. Some writers appear to benefit from the forced brevity. Keneally, however, seems inhibited and constrained by the limitation in his life of Abraham Lincoln. Unlike his previous, lengthier nonfiction outings (notably The Great Shame and the recent American Scoundrel), his life of Lincoln reads not as a great illuminating narrative placing past events in a fresh perspective, but rather like a Cliffs Notes version of better books by such scholars as David Donald. The facts of Lincoln's life as related are both true and readable, but the author offers no new insights, no imaginative or interpretive leaps, no poetry. Keneally is at his best, perhaps, in presenting Lincoln in his final stage, a calculating and at times ruthless war leader. This is the Lincoln whom Keneally's "American scoundrel," Dan Sickles, knew best and with whom Keneally also seems to be pretty well acquainted. Still, all the other Lincolns here-the wilderness child, the prairie lawyer, the husband, the father, the fledgling politician-come across as little more than hollow robots walking doggedly from one well-known benchmark to the next, lacking that one element so essential to real life: a soul. (On sale Dec. 30) Forecast: Lincoln sells, and so does Keneally. So, despite its flaws, will this brief bio. (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Syndetic Solutions - Library Journal Review for ISBN Number 0670031755
Lincoln
Lincoln
by Keneally, Thomas
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Library Journal Review

Lincoln

Library Journal


(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Abraham Lincoln was several times accused of "spirit-rapping," whereby he called on the dead to speak. Novelist and biographer Keneally has worked just such magic in his eloquent and insightful brief biography of America's most complicated subject. Like Lincoln, Keneally tells a good story, finding the right anecdote to make his case and never forgetting the moral of the tale. Keneally's Lincoln is a self-actuated farm boy made good by self-discipline, savvy instincts, wit, the wisdom acquired from courtrooms, friendships, and political huckstering-and luck. He is an individual of principle committed to promoting the self-made man through government support for economic improvements and opening a West free of slavery. Keneally recounts Lincoln's early missteps in romance, business, and politics and his self-doubts and depression as his star dimmed several times, and he concedes Lincoln's erratic course toward emancipation and a successful strategy for Union victory during the Civil War. But in the end, Keneally's Lincoln emerges almost as a "father Abraham" anointed for his great role in leading a chosen people toward redemption and their rendezvous with destiny. This is an epic compressed into a tightly written biography that all Americans might read with profit. Keneally's occasional tendency to let folklore stand as fact notwithstanding, there is no better brief introduction to Lincoln and his American dream. For all libraries.-Randall M. Miller, Saint Joseph's Univ., Philadelphia (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Syndetic Solutions - BookList Review for ISBN Number 0670031755
Lincoln
Lincoln
by Keneally, Thomas
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BookList Review

Lincoln

Booklist


From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

The ever-popular Keneally, who previously depicted bad-boy Union general Daniel Sickles in American Scoundrel [BKL F 1 02], lends his talented pen to the publisher's series of 180-page biographies. The subject of Lincoln has been thoroughly mined, yet this author's skill at characterization reveals a new angle: a sensitive discernment of Lincoln's anxieties. Although Lincoln's depression is an old chestnut with Lincoln writers, not many crystallize it like this: "No man ever entered Springfield, a town that would become his shrine, as tentative, odd-seeming, and daunted as Abraham Lincoln." The sentence expresses the hesitancy with which Lincoln entered the marriage he made in that town, and Keneally regularly touches on Mary Todd's caprices in passages about Lincoln's political career, which his wife keenly promoted. This emphasis on Lincoln's worries also marks the description of his youth, his casting about as boatman, storekeeper, and surveyor--seeking anything but the subsistence farming that he grew up in and loathed. Keneally succinctly and insightfully presents a humanized Lincoln. --Gilbert Taylor

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 0670031755
Lincoln
Lincoln
by Keneally, Thomas
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Kirkus Review

Lincoln

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

A fine, brief life of the Great Emancipator by the Australian novelist (Woman of the Inner Sea, 1993, etc.) and biographer (American Scoundrel, p. 31, etc.). Keneally voices an antipodean appreciation for Lincoln as a child of the rough, violent frontier, a milieu that did much to forge his character and sorrowful countenance. (Lincoln once remarked to a journalist of his childhood, " The short and simple annals of the poor.' That's my life, and that's all you or anyone else can make of it.") From this setting, the author teases out little-reported data, including the fact that while serving in the frontier militia, Lincoln may have contracted syphilis from a prostitute, which led him to much subsequent worry about his fitness as a father--though not, as it no doubt would in the present political climate, to any public scandal. Keneally's Lincoln is a man of extraordinary character built against extraordinary odds, but also a man of ordinary mortal failings, as fond of dirty jokes as he was of the works of Daniel Defoe and William Shakespeare. He emerges in these pages as nothing short of a hero, though a human one; this slim volume does not in any way resemble Carl Sandburg's two-volume hagiography. Keneally conveys an informed understanding of just how controversial Lincoln was in his time (he writes, for instance, that the "house divided" speech ran the risk of killing Lincoln's political career, which was salvaged largely by soundly showing up opponent Stephen Douglas in the barnstorming debates of 1858) and just how close he came to failure in attempting to restore the Union, which even Lincoln's great admirer Horace Greeley was moved to call "our bleeding, bankrupt, almost dying nation" during the reelection campaign of 1864. In short, his view of Lincoln is so fresh that one wishes only that the Penguin Lives format afforded Keneally room to say still more about this iconic leader. Exemplary and illuminating, even for readers well versed in Lincolniana.