Lincoln: The Biography of a Writer by Fred Kaplan

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: October 2008
  • 406pp
  • Sales Rank: 34,616
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    Reader Rating: (4 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Intellectual Stimulation" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: October 2008
    • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
    • Format: Hardcover, 406pp
    • Sales Rank: 34,616

    Synopsis

    For Abraham Lincoln, whether he was composing love letters, speeches, or legal arguments, words mattered. In Lincoln, acclaimed biographer Fred Kaplan explores the life of America's sixteenth president through his use of language as a vehicle both to express complex ideas and feelings and as an instrument of persuasion and empowerment. Like the other great canonical writers of American literature—a status he is gradually attaining—Lincoln had a literary career that is inseparable from his life story. An admirer and avid reader of Burns, Byron, Shakespeare, and the Old Testament, Lincoln was the most literary of our presidents. His views on love, liberty, and human nature were shaped by his reading and knowledge of literature.

    Since Lincoln, no president has written his own words and addressed his audience with equal and enduring effectiveness. Kaplan focuses on the elements that shaped Lincoln's mental and imaginative world; how his writings molded his identity, relationships, and career; and how they simultaneously generated both the distinctive political figure he became and the public discourse of the nation. This unique account of Lincoln's life and career highlights the shortcomings of the modern presidency, reminding us, through Lincoln's legacy and appreciation for language, that the careful and honest use of words is a necessity for successful democracy.

    Illuminating and engrossing, Lincoln brilliantly chronicles Abraham Lincoln's genius with language.

    The Washington Post - Jonathan Yardley

    The literature about Abraham Lincoln is so vast as to defy comprehension, yet historians and other scholars—not to mention novelists, poets, artists, sculptors, even composers—continue to find new and revealing things to say about this greatest of all Americans. Fred Kaplan's Lincoln: The Biography of a Writer, is the latest case in point, a book that is certain to become essential to our understanding of the 16th president. To be sure, many others before Kaplan have dealt in various ways with Lincoln's love of literature and writing, but no one has explored the subject so deeply or found so much meaning in it.

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    Biography

    Fred Kaplan is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of English at Queens College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. He is the author of several biographies, including The Singular Mark Twain, Gore Vidal, Henry James, The Imagination of Genius, Charles Dickens, and Thomas Carlyle, which was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Pulitzer Prize. He lives in Boothbay, Maine.

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    Customer Reviews

    Disappointedby Anonymous

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    September 29, 2009: This book was supposed to be about Lincoln as a writer, but it seems to be more about his life or his proposed philosophy. The author sounds as if he knew what Lincoln FELT, as if he were there with him. That turns into biased writing unless the author includes a primary source from which to base his opinion.

    The author is trying to show Lincoln as an Enlightenment man who really did not believe in God or the Bible (revelation as truth) as much as we would think from his writing and that his decisions were based on "reality," as the author would put it, and Lincoln did not depend on his faith in God to make the important decisions of his presidency.

    I would tend to think that a non-believer would not have spent as much time reading the Bible or quoting it as Lincoln did if he did not believe in it. A better book to read about Lincoln's writing is The Eloquent President: A Portrait of Lincoln Through His Words, by Ronald White, Jr.

    LLincoln as a writerby Anonymous

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    September 13, 2009: excellent new insight on Abraham Lincoln. In particular how he believed how important good writing is to all humanity. Through his writing he strived to be terse but yet use the right words and structure to get his ideas across with the result he was a tremondous influence on the country and as a result a great leader and president


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