Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Differ We Must: How Lincoln Succeeded in a Divided America is a 2023 nonfiction book by Steve Inskeep, about Abraham Lincoln.. The title of the work originates from the phrase "If for this you and I must differ, differ we must," which Lincoln wrote inside correspondence to Joshua Fry "Josh" Speed, referring to his disagreement with Speed's viewpoints, as Speed's family owned slaves.
In “Differ We Must: How Lincoln Succeeded In a Divided America,” Steve Inskeep is taking on one of the most challenging tasks for a biographer by profiling the nation's 16th president. There's ...
The American Book Review was founded in 1977 by Ronald Sukenick. [6] According to the novelist Raymond Federman, in his series reading with American Book Review in 2007, Sukenick founded the American Book Review because The New York Times had stopped reviewing books by "that group labeled experimental writers", and Sukenick wanted to start a "journal where we can review books that everyone is ...
"9 Presidents Who Screwed Up America" comes just in time as the country prepares to select the 45th U.S. president. Hopefully whoever's elected doesn't end up being number 10 on McClanahan's ...
Aroused by the articles in the Morning Post, Carnegie went over to the British Museum Library and read a number of Lincoln books; the more he read, the more fascinated he became. Finally he determined to write a book on Lincoln, himself. Carnegie began the work in Europe, and labored over it for a year there, and then for two years in New York ...
In his review of A. Lincoln, historian David W. Blight wrote, "this thoroughly researched book belongs on the A-list of major biographies of the tall Illinoisan; it's a worthy companion for all who admire Lincoln's prose and his ability to see into, and explain, America's greatest crisis." [13] Reviewer Phillip C. Stone wrote:
The book is written by Pulitzer Prize-winning author and New Yorker staff writer Lawrence Wright. Based on a long-form article in the magazine, which took up most of the January 4, 2021, print issue, [2] the book guides readers through the tragic year of 2020 that America spent fighting against the COVID-19 pandemes.
Coronavirus is back, but how worried should you be? Alexander Nazaryan. Updated July 28, 2023 at 2:29 PM. People at a COVID-19 vaccine clinic in Los Angeles on Aug. 5, 2022.