Skip to main content
Displaying 1 of 1
The zealot and the emancipator : John Brown, Abraham Lincoln and the struggle for American freedom
2020
Availability
Large Cover Image
Trade Reviews
Library Journal Review
Historian Brands (Univ. of Texas at Austin; Dreams of El Dorado) joins the stories of John Brown and Abraham Lincoln as they struggled with the intractable problem of slavery. Brands skillfully employs the men's own dramatic words to draw readers into their lives and visions for the United States. In early chapters, Brown's fiery spirit and militancy eclipsed Lincoln's gradualism. They never met, but each served as a foil for the other, Lincoln wanting to avoid war on Brown's terms, and Brown rejecting Lincoln's political approach. Abolitionist Frederick Douglass, most significant of the author's many well-drawn secondary figures, served as a bridge between the two men. Before the war, he assisted Brown in assembling his followers. Later, he became an informal antislavery adviser/critic to Lincoln during the Civil War. Brown's execution in 1859 put Lincoln's character and actions at the center of Brands's account. Throughout, he focuses on how these men's values and visions affected their actions. Brands largely avoids becoming bogged down on details of consequential events he describes. VERDICT A fascinating and wonderfully readable portrayal of the tensions between fiery militancy and determined but measured devotion in working toward a goal. Excellent for general readers, especially those with an interest in the Civil War.--Charles K. Piehl, Minnesota State Univ., Mankato
Publishers Weekly Review
University of Texas historian Brands (Dreams of El Dorado) delivers an entertaining and insightful dual biography of revolutionary abolitionist John Brown and President Abraham Lincoln. Brown's participation in the 1856 murder of five pro-slavery settlers in Kansas and the 1859 attack on the federal armory at Harper's Ferry, Va., filled Lincoln with horror, according to Brands. To Lincoln, who promised voters during his presidential campaign that he had no intention of eradicating slavery in the Southern states, Brown was a fanatic whose "lawless invasion" threw slavery's supporters on the defensive and undermined the attempts of moderates to limit its power. In short, tightly focused chapters alternating between Brown's and Lincoln's perspectives, Brand narrates their progress, as Brown becomes convinced that he's God's chosen weapon against human bondage, and Lincoln emerges as a leader in the Republican Party and evolves his attitudes toward slavery. Though they never met, Brown and Lincoln both died as martyrs to "slave power," Brands writes, and spent much of their lives trying to answer the question "what does a good man do when his country commits a great evil?" Though much of Brands's material is familiar, he provides essential historical context and intriguing insights into both men's characters and decision-making. American history fans will be thrilled. (Oct.)
Librarian's View
Displaying 1 of 1