The Zealot and the Emancipator
By H. W. Brands
By H. W. Brands
By H. W. Brands
By H. W. Brands
By H. W. Brands
Read by Robert Fass
By H. W. Brands
Read by Robert Fass
Category: Civil War History | 19th Century U.S. History | Political Figure Biographies & Memoirs
Category: Civil War History | 19th Century U.S. History | Political Figure Biographies & Memoirs
Category: Civil War History | 19th Century U.S. History | Political Figure Biographies & Memoirs | Audiobooks
-
$17.95
Oct 12, 2021 | ISBN 9780525563457
-
Oct 06, 2020 | ISBN 9780385544016
-
Oct 06, 2020 | ISBN 9780593293232
1000 Minutes
Buy the Audiobook Download:
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
The General vs. the President
Red Line
Mike Nichols
Believer
Joan Mitchell
A Shot to Save the World
Colors of the Mountain
Please Be with Me
Aria
Praise
One of Smithsonian Magazine‘s Best Books of 2020
“[Brands] scrupulously narrates the relevant facts and trusts readers to form their own conclusions. . . The Zealot and the Emancipator relates these familiar events skillfully. . . [Brands] recognize[s] that the contrast between Brown and Lincoln offers a lesson that has never been timelier. Prudence and idealism are complementary virtues. And zeal unencumbered by a concern for consequences is indistinguishable, in practice, from bloodlust.”
—The Wall Street Journal
“Brands’s study of Brown and Lincoln [is] at heart an appraisal of contrasting political designs and personas in prerevolutionary times. . . [The Zealot and the Emancipator] builds on strengths long evident in Brands’s books, combining expert storytelling with thoughtful interpretation vividly to render major events through the lives of the chief participants. . . This book presents a gripping account of the politics that led to Southern secession, war and the abolition of slavery.”
—The New York Times Book Review
“Gripping. . . [Brands poses] a worthy question for any era but particularly for the one we’re living through. . . Brands offers a nuanced middle path. In Brown and Lincoln, he presents two perfectly imperfect heroes who act in ways that both excite and disappoint us. . . The Zealot and the Emancipator feels particularly well timed. . . The lessons it contains about America’s slow progress toward a more perfect union, even during a time of literal disunionification, are legion, but the takeaway is clear.”
—The Washington Post
“[The Zealot and the Emancipator is] a tale told by a master storyteller, with a momentum and a power appropriate to the subject. In these pages we have the hare (Brown) and the tortoise (Lincoln). In these pages it is no fable, but instead one of the greatest, but surely the bloodiest, American stories.”
—The Boston Globe
“The Zealot and the Emancipator deftly recounts two martyrs’ disparate approaches to ending slavery. . . Engaging. . . Brands concludes his fast-paced book with a grand flourish, bringing the seemingly disparate legacies of Brown and Lincoln into sync.”
—Washington Independent Review of Books
“Fascinating. . . This book is the work of a master historian at the top of his craft.”
—New York Journal of Books
“A skilled narrative writer, Brands offers a vivid account of the raid on Harper’s Ferry and its aftermath.”
—London Review of Books
“Featuring the riveting narrative sweep, sharp eye for detail, and original analysis we have come to expect from H. W. Brands, The Zealot and the Emancipator vividly illuminates the convulsive battles to fulfill the long-deferred American dream of freedom for all. Along the way, Brands makes thought-provoking connections between these two extraordinary men—a revolutionary and a president—that have eluded most historians for generations. Here is a book that deserves to become foundational reading for America’s new reckoning with slavery, race, and racism.”
—Harold Holzer, author of The Presidents vs. the Press and winner of the Gilder Lehrman Lincoln Prize
“Frederick Douglass appreciated both Abraham Lincoln, whom he deemed ‘emphatically the black man’s president,’ and John Brown, whose zeal in the cause of black freedom he acknowledged ‘was far greater than mine.’ Similarly, H. W. Brands evenhandedly portrays both of those martyrs to African American freedom as they trod their separate and distinct paths toward the same goal. This volume is a worthy companion to Brands’s earlier biographies of FDR, Benjamin Franklin, and other eminent Americans.”
—Michael Burlingame, author of Abraham Lincoln: A Life
“Fascinating”
—The New York Times
“Excellent. . . Brands is an adroit storyteller and captures both Brown’s intensity and zeal and Lincoln’s pragmatism and wit.”
—Christian Science Monitor
“Reveal[s] striking parallels between the elections of 1860 and 2020. The extreme polarization, violent rhetoric, distortions – we’ve been here before.”
—Austin Chronicle
“Brands is a master storyteller. . . Brands uses original sources and narrative flair to illuminate how Brown’s fierce moral clarity eventually forced Lincoln to confront the sins of slavery. The result is an informative, absorbing and heartbreaking American story, the reverberations of which are still felt today.”
—Booklist (starred)
“Entertaining and insightful . . . Brands provides essential historical context and intriguing insights into both men’s characters and decision-making. American history fans will be thrilled.”
—Publishers Weekly
“An outstanding dual biography”
—Kirkus Reviews (starred)
“Brands skillfully lays out nuances in [Lincoln and Brown’s] lives.”
—Booklist (starred)
“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.”
—Library Journal
“Superb. . . A fascinating, authoritative, carefully researched account. . . Complex, stunning, and thought-provoking. . . Brands presents the portraits of these two giants, Brown and Lincoln, in such stark and affecting terms that we cannot help but be moved and jarred by this story of their lives, their times, their beliefs and their deaths. We all might profit from careful consideration of those lives and the laws and conditions that defined them and shaped their identities and destinations.”
—BookReporter.com
“Brisk and vivid . . . engaging.”
—Shelf Awareness
“Good books about history inform. Great books about history inform, enlighten, and entertain. [The Zealot and the Emancipator] does all three. [Brands] creates this magic by using nuance, pacing, erudition, and the magic of a born storyteller, [drawing] the reader not only into the multilayered personalities of the book’s leading men [but] also into the fragmented, harshly divisive, and sometimes violent state of American society in the years leading up to the Civil War. . . Impressive research and tightly woven narrative.”
—Blue Mountain Review
“Incredibly timely. . . Given the present political climate, one cannot help but find parallels, lessons, and warnings in The Zealot and the Emancipator.”
—Law & Liberty
“Brands has written perhaps his most fluent book, a constantly engaging study of history and biography worthy of the model on which it is built: Plutarch’s parallel lives. . . Sometimes Brands needs only a sentence to show why Brown and Lincoln belong together. . . That kind of parallel structure reminds me of Samuel Johnson.”
—The University Bookman
“Your concept of the antebellum and Civil War eras will be reshaped by this masterpiece.”
—The Archive, Best Books of 2020
“Brands is an outstanding storyteller. . . theatrical in his oral presentations of historical events. His prose is just as exciting. He is able to tell stories of complex issues without being tedious or pedantic. . . Brands could write about planting grass and make it entertaining.”
—Roanoke Times
21 Books You’ve Been Meaning to Read
Just for joining you’ll get personalized recommendations on your dashboard daily and features only for members.
Find Out More Join Now Sign In