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Abraham Lincoln: A Life

Abraham Lincoln: A Life
By Michael Burlingame

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Product Description

In the first multi-volume biography of Abraham Lincoln to be published in decades, Lincoln scholar Michael Burlingame offers a fresh look at the life of one of America's greatest presidents. Incorporating the field notes of earlier biographers, along with decades of research in multiple manuscript archives and long-neglected newspapers, this remarkable work will both alter and reinforce current understanding of America's sixteenth president.

Volume 1 covers Lincoln's early childhood, his experiences as a farm boy in Indiana and Illinois, his legal training, and the political ambition that led to a term in Congress in the 1840s. In volume 2, Burlingame examines Lincoln's life during his presidency and the Civil War, narrating in fascinating detail the crisis over Fort Sumter and Lincoln's own battles with relentless office seekers, hostile newspaper editors, and incompetent field commanders. Burlingame also offers new interpretations of Lincoln's private life, discussing his marriage to Mary Todd and the untimely deaths of two sons to disease.

But through it all -- his difficult childhood, his contentious political career, a fratricidal war, and tragic personal losses -- Lincoln preserved a keen sense of humor and acquired a psychological maturity that proved to be the North's most valuable asset in winning the Civil War.

Published to coincide with the 200th anniversary of Lincoln's birth, this landmark publication establishes Burlingame as the most assiduous Lincoln biographer of recent memory and brings Lincoln alive to modern readers as never before.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #11478 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-12-10
  • Format: Box set
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 2024 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
SignatureReviewed by James L. SwansonBetween this fall and the bicentennial of Lincoln's birth in February 2009, publishers will overwhelm bookstores and readers alike with a flood of more than 60 titles on the ever-popular president. One can hardly keep track of them all: one certainly cannot read them all. Of the dozens of these books competing for attention, a few stand out, foremost among them this title. The trend in Lincoln scholarship has been away from the magisterial narrative comprehensiveness of Carl Sandburg in favor of a narrow, deep dive resulting in the so-called slice book: thus entire volumes about one magnificent speech; a key incident; the deepest crisis; the most pivotal year; and so on. A number of these works have merit, but have failed to capture a wide, popular audience.Abraham Lincoln: A Life is the antithesis of a thin slice from the Lincoln pie. In the sweeping style of Doris Kearns Goodwin's Team of Rivals, Burlingame has produced the finest Lincoln biography in more than 60 years and one of the two or three best Lincoln books on any subject in a generation. A distinguished scholar who probably knows more about Abraham Lincoln and his world than anyone else alive, Burlingame has devoted the last quarter century to editing 11 books on the Lincoln primary sources, including the writings of the president's secretaries John Hay, John Nicolay and William Stoddard. Now Burlingame has produced the most meticulously researched Lincoln biography ever written. He resurrected Lincoln's lost early journalism, when the young prairie politician—little more than an immature, unscrupulous hack—wrote more than 200 anonymous op-eds; Burlingame scoured thousands of 19th-century newspapers and discovered hitherto unknown stories; he read hundreds of oral histories, unpublished letters, and journals from Lincoln's contemporaries; and he re-examined the vast manuscript collections at the Library of Congress and National Archives. Burlingame's astonishing chapters covering Lincoln's hard early years and his difficult marriage, and his fresh insights on the profound crisis that made Lincoln great, are worth the price of the book. Do not let the intimidating length or the formidable price deter you. The book need not be read in one sitting. Each part stands alone. Burlingame's Lincoln comes alive as the author unfolds vast amounts of new research while breathing new life into familiar stories. This is a critical, skeptical, loving but never fawning tribute to the man Burlingame praises for achiev[ing] a level of psychological maturity unmatched in the history of American public life. This book supplants Sandburg and supersedes all other biographies. Future Lincoln books cannot be written without it, and from no other book can a general reader learn so much about Abraham Lincoln. It is the essential title for the bicentennial. (Nov.)James L. Swanson is the author of Manhunt: The 12-Day Chase for Lincoln's Killer. His next book is Chasing Lincoln's Killer (Scholastic, Feb. 2009).
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Review

"This book supplants [Carl] Sandburg and supersedes all other biographies. Future Lincoln books cannot be written without it, and from no other book can a general reader learn so much about Abraham Lincoln. It is the essential title for the bicentennial." -- James L. Swanson, Publishers Weekly



"A complete view of Lincoln's life... thorough." -- Diane Cole, U.S. News & World Report



"A monumental boxed effort that weighs in at 10 pounds... The result is a picture of Lincoln from all sides, in a style that is relentless but not daunting." -- Bloomberg News



"A magisterial enterprise." -- William Safire, New York Times



"If you aspire to Ultimate Lincoln Knowledge this is a must-read." -- Chicago Tribune



"These monumental volumes deserve a wide readership." -- St. Louis Post-Dispatch



"Burlingame is a towering figure in Lincoln scholarship, and students of the 16th president have been waiting for this book for years. For all his learning -- Burlingame may know more about Lincoln and his era than anyone in the world -- his take on his subject is fresh, and he doesn't gloss over Lincoln's less appealing attributes. Abraham Lincoln comes as close to being the definitive biography as anything the world has seen in decades." -- Time.com



"An exhaustive and stylishly written biography." -- Greg Rienzi, Gazette



"A stunning feat of research." -- Michael Bishop, Publishers Weekly



"The two-volume set is being heralded as the ultimate new biography of Lincoln, an essential work to be used by all future biographers of the 16th president." -- Anne Byle, Grand Rapids Press



"The granddaddy of all the recent books [on Lincoln] is Michael Burlingame's Abraham Lincoln: A Life... monumental is size, depth and scholarship, this is the new standard biography of our time and surpasses all other life portraits of our 16th president, and is the most important book of the bicentennial." -- James L. Swanson, Washington Times



"Lincoln scholars have waited anxiously for this book for decades. Its triumphant publication proves it was well worth the wait. Few scholars have written with greater insight about the psychology of Lincoln. No one in recent history has uncovered more fresh sources than Michael Burlingame. This profound and masterful portrait will be read and studied for years to come." -- Doris Kearns Goodwin



"The remarkable breadth of Burlingame's research has resulted in a book unlike anything else written about Lincoln. It will be a major contribution to the field." -- Gerald J. Prokopowicz, East Carolina University



"Burlingame has developed a familiarity with the details of Lincoln's life that is truly authoritative, even definitive, and he has genuinely earned his reputation for knowing more about Lincoln than just about anyone who has ever studied him." -- Kenneth J. Winkle, University of Nebraska--Lincoln



"No review could do complete justice to the magnificent two-volume biography that has been so well-wrought by Michael Burlingame." -- Christopher Hitchens, Atlantic Monthly



"The bicentennial of Abraham Lincoln's birth has generated a plethora of Lincoln-related items, but none impresses more than this two-volume biography... Essential." -- Choice



"The author knows more about Lincoln than any other living person." -- New York Review of Books

About the Author

Michael Burlingame is the Sadowski Professor of History Emeritus at Connecticut College. He is the author or editor of a number of books about Lincoln, including Lincoln Observed: Civil War Dispatches of Noah Brooks, published by Johns Hopkins, and The Inner World of Abraham Lincoln.


Customer Reviews

A True up to date Lincoln 2 vol. set4
I have not finished reading the books, but in owning over 150 of the best Lincoln books, I believe this one has captured what the other bios were not quite able to get at (In part due to the on going research etc. since the late 40's) Burlingame adds his own twist on a lot of previous ideas we thought were straight forward. For example Thomas Lincoln, now I'm not so sure he was a hardworker, and Lincoln's side of depression may have come fron him..... One of many new insignts. Just a great two volume set. It just falls short - 4 stars.... Why? The binding of the books are cheap cheap cheap. I Had to do repair work on the back bindings (Fine if you happen to have book repair items on hand). I bet you won't find many of these 1st edition sets in mint condition 50 years from now. You will see what I mean, when you get the books. Cheap binding for a book that deserved better. For the price, leather should not have been out of the question! Still a great read. In my review, I believe the cover also needs to be judged.

A magnificent effort5
Many valuable additions to the ever-expanding collection of books written about Abraham Lincoln have already appeared in this, the bicentennial year of his birth, and many undoubtedly will follow. At least one of them, Michael Burlingame's two-volume set "Abraham Lincoln: A Life," will likely be viewed as one of the classics in the years and decades ahead.

Many full life biographies continue to be written about Lincoln. Many more yet focus on various aspects of his life or personal qualities. Others address how he relates to specific events or ideas of the era in which he lived. There has not been a multi-volume biography written on him in decades. While that alone speaks both to its value and uniqueness, the vast amount of information relating to Lincoln's life that has been uncovered since then puts this one in a category all its own.

I would be surprised if any Lincoln scholar anywhere has done more to uncover previously unknown material relative to Lincoln's life than Burlingame. He has shared results of his research for countless other books written on Lincoln in recent years as is shown by the large number of acknowledgments he has received from other grateful authors. It's only fitting that he be the one to produce what will likely be acknowledged as the definitive work on Lincoln.

The first volume covers Lincoln's life through his Kentucky, Indiana and Illinois years. The second begins with him boarding the train as he departs Springfield, his home for the previous twenty or so years and one to which he'll never return, for Washington. While the book proceeds more or less chronologically as one would expect, it is effectively subdivided into countless mini-chapters - typically a few pages each - where various important facets of Lincoln's life or historical events are developed in detail.

What makes Burlingame's offering so unique? Clearly part of it is its length but vastly more important is what he's been able to do with the freedom that comes from the liberties it affords. I suppose any persevering researcher could uncover enough material to fill over 1500 pages of text but that's only the beginning as it pertains to this book. I suspect he has discarded more material than he used and what he's retained is presented in both an authoritative and logical way. He uses innumerable direct quotes - often presenting the views of those on several sides of an issue (with the issue often being Lincoln himself) - and he then proceeds to tie them together in a coherent way. Virtually everything is attributed to source; there are several hundred pages of endnotes.

The result is a book that portrays Lincoln as no other book written before. New information abounds throughout. Lincoln is presented in a candid, objective way. Warts are not suppressed and the net effect is to portray the most human Abraham Lincoln imaginable. Burlingame was also not afraid to provide his own take on Lincoln as well as his wife Mary and many others and it is clear when he is doing so. He provides enough rationale as to enable the reader to form his or her own opinion.

The net effect of all this has been to enable me to feel as though I know Lincoln in a way I never have. I have read numerous books including all the `acclaimed' ones on Lincoln over the past thirty years. I felt I had a pretty good understanding of the basics involving the `whats' of his life. These volumes have done much to enlarge it and often extended it to the `hows' and the `whys.'

Few reading this will come away from the experience with anything but even more respect for Lincoln than they had previously. I will refrain from describing Lincoln's many attributes as they're well known from elsewhere but I will offer my opinion that it will be the rare reader who won't better appreciate the country's good fortune in having him at the helm when he was. I suspect they will also realize as never before the odds he faced and overcame, the depth of the ridicule and scorn he so often received and his almost superhuman ability to remain above it all. Our country was the beneficiary.

This is a wonderful addition to the set of knowledge pertaining to Lincoln and his - and the country's - times. It is something anybody with an interest in Lincoln will want to read whether they be serious students of the man or simply desirous of wanting to learn more.

Great book,defective binding. Resolved.5
This book is that wonderful combination of research and readibility that is rare in such a lengthy work. Sure to be a standard reference for years to come except the copy I received has what only can be described as cheap or defective binding. The problem is, as Mr. DiCola described, the cover of the book seperates from the page binding, giving one the feel that the book is falling apart in your hands as you are reading it. Quite disappointing. Still, five stars for the author's contribution to Lincoln biography. Since writing this initial review I have contacted John Hopkins about the issues with the quality of the binding and have been most impressed with their response. They are aware of some issues with the binding and will work to correct them and make sure all customers get quality products. Refreshing.