Showing posts with label history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history. Show all posts

Monday, June 21, 2010

Louisa May Alcott: The Woman Behind Little Women


Last summer (wow, I cannot believe that was a year ago!), I reread Little Women, Little Men and read Jo's Boys for the first time. They were all more delightful than I remembered (or anticipated). Although they are books for young readers, they also contain themes and deeper messages that resonate well with more mature readers. If you haven't read them in a while, I highly recommend them.

My lovely sister is a huge Louisa May Alcott fan as well, and share with me this biography, which she had just finished. She was overflowing with interesting information about the Alcotts, and their neighbos, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Nathaniel Hawthorne and other interesting American intellectuals and literary giants of the era.

Louisa May Alcott: The Woman Behind Little Women by Harriet Reisen is fascinating. It's truly a page turner. It follows the insane adventures of the Alcott family, led by their unstable, idealistic father Bronson, and sustained by their hard-working, steady mother, Abby. It's amazing to see how their lives were so intertwined with the lives of Emerson, Thoreau and other important Transcendentalists.

Reisen also illuminated what parts Alcott and her family were models for the beloved March family. After the success of the book, the sisters even took to calling themselves their corresponding March names on occasion! Reisen also outlined all of Alcott's other works. I hadn't realized she had written so much. I had read Eight Cousins and A Rose in Bloom (both magnificent-go read them!), but I wasn't familiar with much else. Thanks to this fantastic biography, I now have a whole new list to add to my "to-reads"!

If you loved Little Women as a child, an adult, or even just loved the movie, read this biography! Even if you're unfamiliar with the story, it's a thrilling tale of an eccentric family, who landed themselves in just the right place during a fascinating and important period in our nations history.

Image from amazon.com

Friday, February 5, 2010

A Treasury of Great American Scandals



Here's another book I finished before the holidays.

I found A Treasury of Great American Scandals by Michael Farquhar at Half-Price Books over the summer, but didn't pick it up again until December. At the time, I was in the mood to read about American History, but wanted something fun and exciting to read as well. This book was the perfect choice.

The book is divided into chapters based on the subject matter of the scandal (family affairs, congressional feuds, etc). There's even an entire chapter devoted to duels! Farquhar gives the details some of the well-known scandals in our nation's history, but also recounts more obscure stories about beloved Presidents and forgotten politicians.

The scandals ranged from the Revolutionary period all the way to the 1970's. Carter is the latest story I can remember (apparently, his brother was quite a character), but there may have been a few mentions of administrations after him. It was sort of refreshing to read about the scandalous lives of politicians hundreds of years ago. Things haven't changed all that much.

In the back, he also provides a detailed timeline of American history, and a roster of American presidents with all of their basic information, and a few nuggets of useless, but interested trivia about each man that held the office.

If you are at all interested in American history, I think you'd enjoy Great American Scandals. And if you find history boring, but wish you knew more about it, this might be your solution!

Farquhar also wrote a version about royals, so I might have to find that one as well. You know how scandalous they can be!

Monday, February 16, 2009

Random Presidential Facts

This post, from one of my new favorite blogs, has 10 fun (weird) facts about US Presidents.  If you are relatively normal and are not as entertained by the rankings from my previous post as I am, this will hopefully do a better job.  

Presidential Leadership Survey

This website from c-span is really interesting.  I heard about this poll on NPR today, and was really interested by some of the rankings.  Finding Lincoln and Washington at the top was no surprise, but some of them were surprising.   I guess I should have guessed it since his face is etched on the side of a cliff in South Dakota, but I never realized how admired TR was.  Clearly, I need to brush up on some of my history.  There are some periods and some topics that I know quite well, but others that are rather unknown to me.  Maybe I'll have to watch the History Channel more often.  

It is also cool to see how the rankings changed in the last 8 years.  Some changed rather significantly.   It makes sense that people began to trust Clinton more since more time has passed since his administration.  It will be interesting to see if some of Bush's numbers improve over the next few decades.   I have a feeling I will be playing with this site for a few days...