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Warpaths
Warpaths
Oct 4, 2024 9:18 AM

Author:John Keegan

Warpaths

Military history and geography explain each other in North America as nowhere else in the world. Award-winning historian John Keegan explores their relationship and examines the battles fought over three centuries between Frenchman and Indian, Royalist and colonist, Union and Confederacy, offering compelling profiles of both the land and military leaders, alongside historical events.

Combining rigorous research and insightful analysis with personal experiences and reflections, all in lean and lively prose, Warpaths is a rich and engaging work of military literature.

Reviews

Keegan visits all the battle sites in turn and brings them to life with the evocative prose that his admirers will remember from The Face of Battle...This opus is a labour of love

—— Mail on Sunday

An excursus on the military sites of North America that cleverly marries theme and chronology

—— History Today

He combines personal experiences with professional observations in a way that makes this sterling book an engrossing blend of anecdotal reminiscence and analytical reflection. Like all good writers of good history, Keegan distils the complex into the essence

—— Daily Telegraph

A beguiling example of the trend for fusing history and travel

—— Independent

This is a book by a historian in a confident mood

—— Financial Times

A terrible tale, very well told

—— Tribune

His depiction of Texas is as brilliant as his account of Lyndon Johnson’s driven soul … a richly rewarding book

—— New Statesman

Bradford has a real grasp of history and the ability to make it spark into new life

—— Anne Chisholm , Sunday Telegraph

Bradford's forte, ever since she was a history-mad girl, is thinking herself into other lives

—— Daily Telegraph

It is to Goodwin's credit that she teases out the variety and peculiarities among the four presidents . . . she renders her characters with a depth and intricacy that not all academic historians seek to attain. We can only hope that a few of Goodwin's many readers will find in her subjects' examples a margin of inspiration

—— David Greenberg , New York Times

A timely study of what makes a great President . . . Few are better placed to explain the current vacuum, and predict what might fill it, than Doris Kearns Goodwin. The 75-year-old swam with Lyndon Johnson at his ranch, worked with Steven Spielberg on Lincoln and dined with Barack Obama at the White House. It is not, as the title implies, an opportunistic entry into the ever-expanding Trump canon. She began work on it five years ago . . . She considers what lessons they offer for transformational crisis management, turnaround and visionary leadership, but sugars the pill with telling details and funny anecdotes

—— David Smith , The Guardian

Pulitzer- and Carnegie Medal-winning historian Goodwin draws on 50 years of scholarship in this strong and resonant addition to the literature of the presidency . . . extremely relevant

—— Booklist

Remarkable ... comprehensive, human, and engaging, clearly the results of long study.

—— Publishers Weekly, starred review

An inspiring guide to the very best of human endeavour - a book filled with well-told stories and lessons

—— Henry Mance, Political correspondent, Financial Times

Pulitzer Prize-winning author Doris Kearns Goodwin demonstrates how leaders are made, not born, as she thoughtfully explores the highs and lows of four U.S. presidents who faced moments of horrific national crisis. Goodwin's clean, assured sentences set the stage as each future president discovers within himself the desire to enter politics, the calamitous blows that knocked each one down, and how they tackled the struggles that tore at the sinews of the country. Most fascinating is Goodwin's revelations about how very differently Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Lyndon B. Johnson approached not only their political careers but how they developed the character traits that helped them see-or make-a path toward a critical response that many others disagreed with. Lincoln's delivery of the Emancipation Proclamation, Theodore Roosevelt's handling of labor strikes, FDR's battle against the Great Depression in his first 100 days, and Johnson's prioritization of civil rights while a nation mourned were actions that could have ripped the country further apart but eventually bound it together and strengthened its democratic foundations. The rare weakness within Leadership: In Turbulent Times is the outlining of specific qualities, such as "Take the measure of the man" and "Set a deadline and drive full-bore to meet it," that are meant to distill leadership wisdom into bullet points, like contemporary business books. Goodwin's strength is in the rich context she provides as she shows that great leaders develop in dissimilar ways but ultimately have a vision they reach for and rely on when times are at their most turbulent.

—— Adrian Liang, Amazon Book Review (An Amazon.com Best Book of September 2018)

Leadership should help us raise our expectations of our national leaders, our country and ourselves

—— Tim Kaine , The Washington Post

She writes easily and attractively; the reader is carried along effortlessly with the narrative sweep of her prose . . . engrossing . . . it is impossible not to admire the skill with which Goodwin tells four absolutely riveting stories

—— Alan Ryan , New Statesman

She is the most fluent, most wide-ranging of modern presidential chroniclers . . . compelling. There is much in Leadership that offers lessons, even consolations that apply universally. Kearns Goodwin shows they offer lessons that can be embraced by the businessman, the aspiring politician and the striving individual

—— The Herald

Riveting . . . Goodwin appraises in illuminating detail

—— Hettie OBrien , Prospect Magazine

Full of life and colour

—— Sunday Times Best Politics Books of 2018

A fabulously engrossing, exciting narrative in the grand old style ... overflowing with colour and character

—— Dominic Sandbrook on 'Team of Rivals'

Even if you’ve never heard of Moses, the freshness of Caro’s prose makes this an exhilarating study in power

—— Sunday Times

There has never been a better book about the art of politics, nor a more riveting study of what power does to an individual

—— Dominic Sandbrook , BBC History Magazine

Its ambition, which is vast, matches the scale of vision of its subject… Aside from being a considerable work of biography, The Power Broker is a near-peerless work of narrative nonfiction. Caro’s style is born of his obsessive attention to detail: he specialises in the rapid-fire accumulation of crushing facts, and the well-placed one-sentence paragraph that knocks you out like a sucker-punch… There are many moments of greatness in this brilliant book.

—— Karl Whitney , Irish Times

Robert Caro’s biography of Lyndon Johnson is said to be on William Hague, George Osborne and Jeremy Hunt’s summer reading list

—— Guardian

This book shows the mastery of Johnson in politics, and also the mastery of Caro in biography

—— David M. Shribman , Bloomberg/BusinessWeek

A great and occasionally astonishing biography

—— John R MacArthur , Spectator

One of the greatest biographies in the history of American letters

—— Bob Hoover , Cleveland Plain Dealer

The latest in what is almost without question the greatest political biography in modern times… Nobody goes deeper, works harder or produces more penetrating insights than [Caro]

—— Patrick Beach , Austin American-Statesman

A major event in biography, history, even publishing itself… Caro has once more combined prodigious research and a literary gift to mount a stage for his Shakespearean figures: LBJ, JFK, LBJ’s nemesis Robert F. Kennedy

—— Library Journal (Starred)

A masterly how-to manual, showing Johnson’s knowledge of governing, his peerless congressional maneuvering and effective deal-making. The Years of Lyndon Johnson is a compact library: brilliant biography, gripping history, searing political drama and an incomparable study of power. It’s also a great read… And, after thousands of pages spent with Lyndon Johnson, one of Caro’s singular achievements is that you want more

—— Peter Gianotti , Newsday

Brilliant… Riveting reading from beginning to end… The real tour de force in this stunning mix of political and psychological analysis comes in the account of the transition between administrations, from November 23 1963 to January 8, 1964… An utterly fascinating character study, brimming with delicious insider stories… Political wonks, of course, will dive into this book with unbridled passion, but its focus on a larger-than-life, flawed but fascinating individual – the kind of character who drives epic fiction – should extend its reach much, much further. Unquestionably, one of the truly big books of the year

—— Booklist (Starred)

The series’ crowning volume

—— The Economist

This pile-driving book has all the ingredients of a great drama, the humiliating childhood breeding a lifelong desire (to be president), the failure (to gain the Democratic nomination), the humiliation (almost constant, by JF Kennedy) the sudden change of fate (the assassination), and the vindication (when Johnson drives through key bills that Kennedy couldn’t, and proves himself the most astute of politicians). Totally compelling

—— Biography of the year , Sunday Times Ireland

It is an extraordinary story of a deeply flawed character, told with such verve, such command of the facts, and such an understanding of power

—— Craig Brown , Mail on Sunday

A major work of history and biography

—— Annie Proulx , Guardian

The fourth installation of Caro’s masterwork came out this year and, cheeringly, there is no slackening of plot or pace

—— Kathryn Hughes , Guardian

It is a profound portrait of two men, Johnson and John F. Kennedy, and the relationship between them

—— Sarah Stands , Evening Standard

A fascinating story, Shakespearean in its passion and fury, as well as darkly comical

—— Craig Brown , Mail on Sunday

This pile-driving book has all the ingredients of a great drama, the humiliating childhood breeding a lifelong desire (to be president), the failure (to gain the Democratic nomination), the humiliation (almost constant, by J. F. Kennedy) the sudden change of fate (the assassination), and the vindication (when Johnson drives through key bills that Kennedy couldn’t, and proves himself the most astute of politicians). Totally compelling

—— Sunday Times Ireland

The fourth volume of Caro’s magisterial work spans the five years that end shortly after Kennedy’s assassination, as Johnson prepares to push for a civil rights

—— New York Times

A meticulous dissection of political and economic structures in the US… a riveting read by one of the modern masters of historical writing

—— Morning Star
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