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A British view
The history and principles of the U.S. ConstitutionThe Colliers cover the creation of the Constitution in six chapters: (1) The Articles of Confederation looks at the covenant that governed the new nation in between the Continental Congresses of 1774 to 1781 and the ratification of the Constitution in 1787. Specifically, the chapter establishes the flaws in the system that required something new; (2) Danger Everywhere explores the problems facing the United States at this time in terms of foreign powers, Indians, Barbary pirates, and national debt, as well as questions over state borders and the insurrection of the Shays' Rebellion; (3) The Great Men Gather talks about the collection of "demi-gods" who came to Philadelphia to create the Constitution; (4) Compromises focuses primarily on the conflicting interest of the larger and smaller states, with resulted in the compromise of the Senate and the House of Representatives, as well as the issues dividing North and South; (5) Principles looks at the guiding ideas of the Constitution: natural rights, the social contract, Federalism, Nationalism, and Separation of Powers. This is the most important chapter in the book since it gets at the heart and spirit of the Constitution rather than the letter of it that you get from reading the Articles; and (6) Ratification and the Bill of Rights covers the history of the ratification, including the hard fights in Virginia and New York, and the universal recognition of the fact a bill of rights had to be added.
The book concludes with an Epilogue that talks about the significance of the Constitution that remains remarkable intact. Ultimately, it is as much the analysis of the Constitution as the history of its creation that matters in this volume. The chapter on Principles epitomizes the goal of this series to strip history down to a "central core." Certainly this volume provides a more detailed look at the process and its results than you will get from a standard American history textbook. The book is illustrated with historic paintings and political cartoons, as well as more contemporary photographs representing Constitutional issues in modern times. "The Drama of American History" series is a wonderful approach to the study of the nation's story, although I would think the cost of providing classroom sets would be prohibited to the vast majority of educational institutions. However, teachers of American history can certainly use this model to organize and supplement their classes.


A Great Teacher's Field Guide
It is really great it was very useful to me

Interesting Snapshot of Frontier ViolenceThis book is well researched and introduces many charactors (Lew Wallace, Pat Garrett, Billy the Kid and John Henry Tunstall to name a few). It is a solid chronology of the disputes and charactors that made Lincoln County a lawless, murderous place for a few years in the late 1870's. Warning for those expecting someone to be wearing a white hat in this tale, there is no romance in this telling of the old west.
Well done, but not one of Utley's best studiesThe first problem is the problem inherent to historicism itself. Utley, as you might expect, views the Lincoln County War as a typical expression of violence on the Western frontier--a product of the zeitgeist as the "code of the West." By taking this position, Utley fails to see the unique character of the Lincoln County War. It must be said that Utley notes that the Lincoln County War was not a typical range war, nor a regular case of frontier vigilantism. No, it appears the mere fact that violence occured and it was on the frontier made it a "typical case of frontier violence." Considering the regularity of violence in human relations throughout history it is a bit disengenous to single out frontier violence in the 1870s in New Mexico from, say, European violence of that period, or indeed violence anywhere around the globe at that time. The second problem is that, in his desire to be neutral and not take sides, Utley fails to see the obviously more sinister character and motives of the Dolan faction. In particular, Utley, apparently under the influence a a couple of amateur historians, describes Brady as an honest and competent lawman and Col. Dudley as a blustering drunk but not necessarily as an overt Dolan supporter. If Sheriff Brady was honest and competent I would hate to see what Utley considered dishonest and corrupt. Also, there is a great deal of documentary evidence that Dolan and Dudley conspired prior to Dudley's intervention in the five day battle that resulted in McSween's death. I find it hard to believe that Utley was not aware of this evidence. For whatever reason (probably in the desire to remain neutral and not present one side as right and the fact that Utley is a military historian and therefore partial to military figures and lawmen) he chose not to include it.
All in all, I would certainly recommend this book. Despite a few flaws, it is an important step toward improving the level of debate on the Lincoln County War. Utley, as a writer of history, is second to none. He writes clearly but with an engaging sense of style and drama that gives life to his subjects without romanticizing or, just as importantly, disparaging the past.
When the Code of the West Replaces Law and OrderThe remarkable thing about Utley's book is that it's a scholarly study of the effects of the breakdown of law and order in a frontier community. Why, then, is it such an interesting, exciting reading experience? How can it be so entertaining when its aim was to be educational? Utley works with an intriguing subject matter and presents it in a workmanlike fashion.
We learn the real issues, the real protagonists, the real course of events, and the real winners. The truth is even more remarkable than all that Hollywood fiction. Utley pulls no punches in describing the hardship and suffering caused by strong willed parties contesting economic issues by extralegal means, and the unfortunate consequences of mixing guns, alcohol, and the "Code of the West."


Worth the Time
Scholarly research solidly evident

A PRAGMATIC HEROThat said, this book is a good introduction to Lincoln and his Presidency. The book skims briefly over Lincoln's life before he became the 16th President. There are advantages to this, but the treatment of the Lincoln-Douglas debates and of the Kansas-Nebraska Act which led to them is too brief to help understand sucession and the Civil War which followed.
The book's treatment of Lincoln's relationship with his Generals and of the strategy of the War is probably the best single chapter. It has something to teach even those who are familiar with the military history of the war. The chapter on Lincoln as a pragmatic politician and on the 1864 campaign is also well done. The book treats the Emancipation Proclamation at length but to me anyway left something to be desired. (The text and some explicit treatment of it would help) and discusses the fate of Civil Liberties during the War and domestic development during the war in good but not dispositive detail.
If you are looking for an understanding of Lincoln and of the Civil War this is a good place to start but not to end. I suggest reading the book together with the complilation of Lincoln's own speeches and writings in the Library of America series.
Good general biography

History of the "Unibody" Lincolns Motorcars.
Great detailed look at the design and production of Lincolns

A solid examination of Farragut
A very interesting biography of a Civil War Naval Officer

Our Philosopher-PresidentProfessor Diggins argues against those scholars who see Lincoln exclusively as a pragmatic policitican and claims that our Sixteenth President sought a foundational, non-relativistic source for our political values in the principle that all men are created equal, and in the right of all to work and to strive to own property and to better themselves. Lincolns' philosophy, Diggins claims, had its roots in the Declaration of Independence and in Lockean ideas. His reading of Lincoln is supported by discussions of numberous speeches and writings, most of which can be found in the wonderful two-volume Library of America edition of Lincoln's writings.
The broad targets of Professor Diggins's book are philosophical relativists. Much of the book, however, is devoted to a polemic against modern multiculturalism and deconstruction. Lincoln, the philosophy of consensus (one shared broadly by Americans irrespective of their interest group, race, sex, status), and the value of work motivated by material self-interest are defended as an integral part of the American vision, striven for by all and, paradoxically, expanding the scope of our liberties.
The book suffers, I think, from being overly ambitious and from its structure. The arguments are unduly repetitive and this, I think, hinders Professor Diggins from developing them with the depth they deserve. The book strays too far from Lincoln. While much of the discussion of other figures in the book is valuable and illuminating, particularly the discussion of Professor Hartz and of the Federalists, it moves too far from Lincoln or, more precisely, it gives the book a loose free-wheeling character with ideas suggested rather than sufficiently developed. Similarly, Professor Diggins's criticism of multiculturalism, with which I greatly sympathize, is not well integrated with the rest of the book. It is simply too much to do a political polemic, a study of Lincoln, and a treatment of American intellectual history in a single, relatively short volume.
These quibbles to one side, the work is well worth reading. It explores our American heritage, challenges prevailing orthodoxies and offers much for further study and reflection. This is a worthwhile exploration of important issues in the nature of our precious American experience.
Thoroughly Enjoyable

Interesting and very readable analysis.
A Penetrating Study and a cautionary tale.

A space odyessy with Abe Lincoln.