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Botstein isn't as smart as he appears
Bracing mind but hopelessly idealisticAs much as I applaud Botstein's general vision, I cannot help thinking that it would much more practical if we were dealing with a student body composed entirely of white kids from Scarsdale, a demographic type which dominates the Bard students he has the most experience with.
His proposal that high school be eliminated, however, is thoroughly sound, as are his calls for what should be taught before students either go to college or elsewhere. It is curious, however, that he does not mention Simon's Rock, a school exemplifying this very principle, which he even heads. I am an alumnus of it and can attest that describing the place would have made his argument even more compelling.
The truth finally comes out about education

Virtue is it's own joyous rewardI agree with Mr. Remick that virtue can be tought. I also agree that humans striving to learn virtue require an arduous and prolonged experience similar to the West Point experience.
Civil society requires a "remnent" of virtuous, well educated
leaders with moral character. The West Point model is a remarkable and unreplaceable resource for the continuation of our free republic.
Some friendly editing would make this book even better.
Postmodern Pop Narrative Of West Point HistoryNorman Thomas Remick is an interesting, independent scholar with a sense character and, more importantly, a sense of humor.
Do yourself a favor, and buy this book, because it's so original...scholarly text with cartoons and photos! This one won't collect too much dust. One of my favorites: P.289 The cartoon of Thomas Jefferson throwing up his hands saying, "STEADY ON THERE! I DIDN'T SAY A MILITARY ACADEMY WASN'T A GOOD IDEA. I ONLY SAID IT'S NOT CONSTITUTIONAL!"
Stimulating historical references presented with passion

GOOD BUT NEWER BETTER!
Can a noir be comfortable?
Great Debut!

Art and Time in Italy
Greats Work of Short Fiction
With all his "shtick," one of our greatest writersDespite my recent and more mature awareness of his weaknesses, he remains a surprising, brilliant writer. His prose style is dynamic and I continue to emulate that. I was amused to find, however, that I liked the lesser known stories. I found "Death In Venice" ponderous. I liked the stories about the incestuous twins, the tragic man who was dwarfed from a childhood fall, the cuckolded buffoon who is talked into wearing a tutu at a community recital and the eccentric who is compelled to continually mutiliate his dog and heal him. Now these are what I would call real "case histories." I'm sure Mann would scorn me for being partial to these, scornfulness being one of his main attitudes in life. His very disdain of pretension, however, seems like a pretension in itself. Still - his command of language is like no other's.


An easy, relaxing read.
Good story idea
Jeffersonians Beware!

Interesting read about demise of ConfederatesIts central focus is the tension between Jefferson Davis and John Breckenridge, the Confederate Secretary of War. Davis wished to continue the War and Breckenridge hoped to end it in a honorable manner. History demonstrates that Breckenridge was the ultimate winner of the conflict, though his efforts cannot be said to have been pivotal to the outcome.
This book should be read in conjunction with April 1865: The Month That Saved America-- by Jay Winik. Both cover similar subjects, with different emphasis and conclusions.
While the manner in which the Civil War was to end was a basic premise of the book, the book finally devolves into the account of Breckenridge and other Cabinet Members attempts to escape. While this is interesting, Davis spends much to much time describing every minute detail. The last pages of the book border on monotony.
Davis' book is a good read even given its limitations. If one wants to gain an understanding of the end of the Civil War it is a good read.
An Honorable Defeat: The Last DaysThis book is about the last few months left in the Confederate States Government with Jefferson Davis as the autocratic president and John C. Breckinridge as general and secretary of war. Jefferson Davis, though reluctant at first to serve as President of the Confederacy, later vowed never to surrender whatever the cost. While Breckenridge and others saw the writing on the wall and were trying to get Jefferson Davis to pack it in and surrender. John C. Breckenridge hoped the pragmatism would save the shattered remenants of the land he loved, but to no avail.
This book recounts the astounding journey of the entire Confederate Cabinet as they fled Richmond by train, then by whatever means were available... all the way to Cuba for Breckenridge and Benjamin. If you like the books "April 1865: The Month that Saved America" by Jay Winik and "Damage Them All You Can: Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia" by George Walsh are excellent adjuncts to this book. Reading these three books will flesh out the time period and you'll get a better picture as to what was really happening.
"An Honorable Defeat" brings those times long ago past to the light of today with factual writing making this book one of the best-researched and best-written books on history of this time period. In 1865, as the American Civil War entered its last tormented weeks, preceptive men in the Confederate States of Amreica realized that whether or not their side would fall was no longer the ultimate issue, but rather how it should fall. the tragedy of recent generation in central Europe, and in their own hemisphere in Mexico and South America, told them all too well of the retaliation, revenge, and the long dark noight of oppression that could follow defeat in an internal struggle.
In the end, "An Honorable Defeat" shows us the personal struggle between two men, both of whom had fought for the cause, but from radically different motivations, and each of whom now faced the close with dramatically opposing hopes and ideas of how it should end... Jefferson Davis And John C. Breckenridge.
THis is a keeper for your Civil War History Library.
'An Honorable Defeat' is a victory

Political StatementThe book is a defense of State Rights (and decentralized government) as opposed to a strong centralized government. Wether you support one idea or the other this book is definately worth reading to get a different point of view.
For historical reading on Jefferson Davis read his own writings and speeches from his life and service to the United States and then the Confederate States.
An extraordinarily cogent and revealing discourse
Well done Mr. J. and Mr. W. Kennedy

Informative, eventually interesting but uneven biographyAs other reviewers have lamented, there is one solitary chapter on Jefferson's two terms as President and a mere 10 pages on his post-Presidential years. Yet it took Mr. Randall about half the book to get to where Jefferson is participating in the Continental Congress and penning the Declaration of Independence. I learned more about Jefferson's post-Presidential years in John Adams' biography by David McCullough. I learned more about Jefferson the friend, colleague and politician in James Madison's biography by Ralph Ketcham.
I did enjoy the way Randall detailed Jefferson's writing of the Declaration. He showed how a multitude of ideas, theories and philosphies studied and meditated upon by Jefferson coalesced into that historic document.
If you are interested in Thomas Jefferson and are particularly interested in his childhood, his years as student and a young lawyer, you will love this book. Similarly, if you're particularly interested in Jefferson's years in France as ambassador, you'll get a lot out of this book. But if you're looking for more than a 50+ page treatment of his Presidency, you may wish to look elsewhere.
Almost Perfect
Informative and dense biographyJefferson's study of law is interesting in itself. His own experience in the legal field is contrasted with other early founding fathers such as Patrick Henry who, also a lawyer, followed a different avenue towards the law which was more bombastic and less founded on legal realities. The early legal education is important because much of his later writings are extensions of ideas accepted within common law. Also important is his time as a real estate lawyer, which influenced heavily his concept of private property and speculation.
There is a lot to cover in a biography of Jefferson, his years as governor of Virginia, as ambassador to France, the building of Monticello, architect of the Declaration of Independence and founder of UVA. Randall does well with this overwhelming task. Jefferson left a large amount of writings in letters, journals, articles and books that should make a biographer's job easier, but in reality has had them scratching their heads attempting to read the nuances and subtleties of his beliefs.
"Thomas Jefferson: A Life" is a worthwhile, rewarding read and an excellent starting point for introduction into his fascinating life.


An amateurish book with a personal agendaThe very publication of this book is from an odd source: Future Horizons, Inc. The web address for this publisher is listed as FutureHorizons-autism.com and I could not help but feel that this is a case of an autism-related organization claiming someone famous (in this case Thomas Jefferson) as one of their own. As history, Diagnosing Jefferson is poor and surely would have been rejected by any academic press and most trade publishing houses. There is precious little "research" in the scholarly sense; rather the footnotes are a patchwork of all of the best-known Jefferson biographies, Time Magazine, New York Times articles, and the like.
The writing is not bad but is pedestrian and the author seems blinded by his own theory as he struggles to align even the most off hand contemporary observations about Jefferson's behavior with his (Ledgin's) trusty list of Asperger traits. Nevertheless, no matter how forced the diagnosis, Ledgin taunts his detractors, saying flatly that "no other conclusion" can explain Jefferson's "strange behavior." He states boastfully, "I challenge anyone to advance a better solution to the puzzle of his idiosyncratic behavior."
One does not necessarily need formal credentials to write good history, and examples abound of unlettered men and women who have done so, but Norm Ledgin is not one of them. The author earned a bachelors degree in journalism and a masters in political science in the early 1950s, and lists among his occupations: editor of a weekly newspaper in Kansas, and a "traffic safety specialist" in Louisiana. All terribly interesting, but something short of the usual background for one who sets out to write a learned book about an 18th century thinker and political figure.
Ledgin's portrait of Jefferson is simply unrecognizable to me as it has been to most Jefferson scholars; and as far as I know, none have endorsed his thesis. Ledgin's tone is that of a crusader not a detached historian. Like many amateur historians he exhibits a zeal and single mindedness for his subject but lacks the breadth of knowledge and training to give his passions context and balance. This isn't so much a book about Jefferson at all; it is a book about Asperger's Syndrome; therefore, if you want to understand Jefferson you will find Ledgin's polemic tedious and irrelevant.
Mr. See is somewhat short-sighted.Second, I learned by interviewing Mr. Ledgin several years ago that his book was contracted for publication by Carol Publishing, a mainstream New York area trade publisher, and that it had been edited by one of the most respected editors in the business, Hillel Black. Carol went belly-up while preparing Diagnosing Jefferson for print. Rather than start the process of recontacting other trade houses, Mr. Ledgin turned to the specialty publisher, Future Horizons, whose president, Wayne Gilpin, had previously expressed very strong interest.
What has bothered a few people about Mr. Ledgin's book deep-down is his ready acceptance of the Sally Hemings liaison as a 38-year love affair. That acceptance is seemingly understandable to Mr. Ledgin (and now, it appears, to the Thomas Jefferson Foundation at Monticello) on the strength of known facts, but to others it is the basis for a mental and emotional block.
To understand what made Jefferson tick, this is the book.The author has examined and exploited helpfully something all other biographers have missed--the opportunity to identify whatever the basis may have been for Jefferson's many idiosyncrasies and so-called contradictions. Had the biographers simply assembled the quirks puzzling them and discussed them with a neuroscientist or developmental pediatrician or psychologist, they would have arrived at the same conclusion Mr. Ledgin has given us.
A staff member for the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, Dianne Swann-Wright, admitted on the Today show last year, "there was a personal side of Thomas Jefferson that many of us just simply haven't been able to understand." Mr. Ledgin explains that personal side in order to help us understand. Does intellectual curiosity extend only so far as scratching one's head, or are historians ready to listen to well-reasoned answers based in careful research?
I heard Mr. Ledgin speak in Charlottesville, Va., at the Festival of the Book this year. He is more knowledgeable about the very personal side of Thomas Jefferson than most, if not all, the biographers whose works I've read. It should be obvious to a reader of his entire work, including his bibliography and footnotes, that he has examined the Jefferson literature thoroughly, which is what he wrote was the basis for his assembling the eccentricities. His placing of Jefferson on the autism/Asperger's continuum as a result has been backed by at least four experts in that field and another in the behavioral sciences.
This is a landmark work. We must understand that autism and its high-functioning feature, Asperger's Syndrome, are parts of a spectrum condition; some people are disabled by it, some are enhanced by it. The author explains all of that extraordinarily well. One can be both productively brilliant and a high-functioning autistic--like Jefferson, quirky as can be, but a great achiever and mental giant nonetheless.
The reader can learn as much about Asperger's from this book as he or she can about Jefferson. For understanding what made Jefferson tick, this is the book to read.


Misunderstanding Jefferson
Disappointed
Restoration of the RepublicThomas Jefferson proposed that a layer of American government composed of elementary, pure or ward republics should provide the foundation upon which individual State republics and the federated republic would be based. His proposal was heavily influenced both by classic republican theories of civic virtue and citizen participation and by the belief that local public affairs were best managed locally. His views, explicated most thoroughly following his retirement from public office, were not considered during the Constitutional debates and were thus neither explicitly accepted nor rejected during America's founding era.
Federalist proponents of the new Constitution, principally Jefferson's ally James Madison, argued for a Constitutional structure based upon a federal republic whose allocation of power among branches of government would check and balance each other, a republic strong enough to unite the various States and sufficiently consolidated as a national government to resist local factions and interests. Whereas Madison saw citizens as fractious, potentially oppressive, and neither enlightened for self-government. Madison saw democracy as a door through which chaos might enter; Jefferson saw it as the only means by which to prevent ownership of government by "interests" and the resulting citizen alienation from government.
With this in mind, Hart brings these views to mind as he discusses current economic globalization and the evolving of Nation-States, Republicanism, and Original objections to small republics in the light of the twenty-first-century realities.
I found the book to be well-written and the prose foundational at first, then later making cogent sense as he tries to bring Jefferson's ideas into the twenty-first-century. This book does as follows: brings consideration of the revolutionary economic, social, and political changes in the twenty-first century; an examination of whether America in the twenty-first century is an authentic republic; consideration of the objections to small-scale republicanism during the founding-era debate and discussions of the impact of these new realities on early objections to small-scale republicanism; a concluding discussion of the relevance of radical democratic republican ideals to America in the current age.
This is a thoughtful and provocative book and makes a persuasive argument for Jeffersonian principles.