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New York, NY: Random House (2012)
First Edition. Signed on the title page.
Near fine in dust jacket with some mild edge wear to the spine. Otherwise fine and unread.
In this magnificent biography, the Pulitzer Prize–winning author of American Lion and Franklin and Winston brings vividly to life an extraordinary man and his remarkable times.Thomas Jefferson: The Art of Power
gives us Jefferson the politician and president, a great and complex
human being forever engaged in the wars of his era. Philosophers think;
politicians maneuver. Jefferson’s genius was that he was both and could
do both, often simultaneously. Such is the art of power.
Thomas
Jefferson hated confrontation, and yet his understanding of power and of
human nature enabled him to move men and to marshal ideas, to learn
from his mistakes, and to prevail. Passionate about many things—women,
his family, books, science, architecture, gardens, friends, Monticello,
and Paris—Jefferson loved America most, and he strove over and over
again, despite fierce opposition, to realize his vision: the creation,
survival, and success of popular government in America. Jon Meacham lets
us see Jefferson’s world as Jefferson himself saw it, and to appreciate
how Jefferson found the means to endure and win in the face of rife
partisan division, economic uncertainty, and external threat. Drawing on
archives in the United States, England, and France, as well as
unpublished Jefferson presidential papers, Meacham presents Jefferson as
the most successful political leader of the early republic, and perhaps
in all of American history.
The father of the ideal of
individual liberty, of the Louisiana Purchase, of the Lewis and Clark
expedition, and of the settling of the West, Jefferson recognized that
the genius of humanity—and the genius of the new nation—lay in the
possibility of progress, of discovering the undiscovered and seeking the
unknown. From the writing of the Declaration of Independence to elegant
dinners in Paris and in the President’s House; from political
maneuverings in the boardinghouses and legislative halls of Philadelphia
and New York to the infant capital on the Potomac; from his complicated
life at Monticello, his breathtaking house and plantation in Virginia,
to the creation of the University of Virginia, Jefferson was central to
the age. Here too is the personal Jefferson, a man of appetite,
sensuality, and passion.
The Jefferson story resonates today not
least because he led his nation through ferocious partisanship and
cultural warfare amid economic change and external threats, and also
because he embodies an eternal drama, the struggle of the leadership of a
nation to achieve greatness in a difficult and confounding world.
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