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John Adams

John Adams
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Manufacturer: Simon & Schuster Audio
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In this powerful, epic biography, David McCullough unfolds the adventurous life-journey of John Adams, the brilliant, fiercely independent, often irascible, always honest Yankee patriot who spared nothing in his zeal for the American Revolution; who thought, wrote, and spoke out for the "Great Cause" come what might, who traveled far and wide in all seasons and often at extreme risk; who rose to become the second President of the United States and saved the country from blundering into an unnecessary war; who was rightly celebrated for his integrity, and regarded by some as "out of his senses"; and whose marriage to the wise and valiant Abigail Adams is one of the moving love stories in American history.

Much about John Adam's life will come as a surprise to many. His rocky relationship with friend and eventual archrival Thomas Jefferson, his courageous voyage on the frigate Boston in the winter of 1778 and his later trek over the Pyrenees are exploits few would have dared and that few listeners will ever forget.

Like his masterful, Pulitzer Prize-winning biography Truman, David McCullough's John Adams has the sweep and vitality of a great novel. This is history on a grand scale -- an audiobook about politics and war and social issues, but also about human nature, love, religious faith, virtue, ambition, friendship and betrayal, and the far-reaching consequences of noble ideas. Above all, it is an enthralling, often surprising story of one of the most important and fascinating Americans who ever lived.

 

What Customers Say About John Adams:

It is a must read for every American and should be required reading in history classes across the country that are taught by teachers and professors who have a passion to help young people understand the wonder of how the greatest nation on God's green earth was born. As David McCullough has said, you can't ever know too much about these guys (our founders) and this presentation is a masterful way to tell us all more than we ever knew about them. There's no story in all of human history greater than the story that unfolded during the lifetime of John and Abigail Adams with all the events and people who surrounded their life.

They both die as friends on July 4, 1826. On one contested issue after another over the course of his career -- his insistence as an American emissary that France could stop British resistance to American independence by deploying its navy along the coast of North America; his early suspicion of the French Revolution; his hearty support for an American Navy -- Adams proved right in the end. The American Revolution, George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, John Jay, Alexander Hamilton, James Madison all come alive with letters, diaries and journal entries painting an exquisite view of the times. Also, the relationship between Adams and Thomas Jefferson is key throughout most of the book. He served as vice president and cast a still unmatched 31 tie-breaking votes in the Senate. This book is an excellent historical to savor. They are opposites but alike in patriotism. Adams was never idealized like other revolutionary heroes, he was short and stout, embraced conflict, had great humor and devoted to his country.

He traveled as a diplomat to Europe during the 1780's, secured a loan from the Dutch, which was vital for the Revolution. McCullough's study of John Adams, second President of the United States, shows a stubborn, bright, honest and wise man, who also has spiteful qualities but is real and impressive. Adams was raised on a farm, the descendant of farmers from Braintree, Mass. He contributed greatly through his deep sense of public duty, and held his tongue when the greater good was at hand. We watch as events unfold in the Adam's eyes. They had four children, and the oldest son, John Quincy Adams, became the sixth President of the United States. His father saw John's potential and sold some farmland so Adams could attend Harvard and become a lawyer. The wealth of information from letters and journals of John and his supportive wife, Abigail, opens the curtains on the astounding eighteenth century as well as Abigail's unrivaled influence on her husband.

In his own presidency, Adams ''achieved a rare level of statesmanship'' by beginning peace negotiations with the French Republic, an act of reconciliation that alienated many Federalist supporters and jeopardized his chance of re-election in 1800. Abigail never begrudged her husband for his political obligations in France and elsewhere: "He is a good man. He did his duty, even though he hated be separated from Abigail and his children for years. Adams, according to Jefferson, was the delgate most responsible for the Continental Congress's adopting independence. He did all his own yard and farm work, and married Abigail who did all her own housework.

Would to heaven we had none but such in office.he is a man of principle.he will not violate the dictates of his conscience to ingratiate himself with a minister." When Abigail died in 1818, after 54 years of marriage, Adams wished he could lie down beside her and die, too. Adams life is shown from birth to the grave - he lived ninety-one years. The book is full of paradoxes of life. Exciting changes worldwide are mixed with themes of public duty, pride, scandal, insecurity, and all the complex and entangled ways of human nature.

Adams was fortunate he had Abigail who shared his dedication to public duty and high moral standards. Both read widely and had long lives. Their relationship ebbs and flows as they struggle through doing their best for the country. Adams was overall humble and tried to never appear as something he was not.

HE WAS JUST A GOOD PERSON WITH AN EVER PATIENT WIFE. I HAVE ALREADY LOANED IT TO MY DAU-IN-LAW. I AM AN AVID READER OF HISTORY AND HAVE BEEN FOR OVER 60 YEARS. HE COULD NOT HAVE DONE IT WITHOUT ABIGAIL.THE SECTION WHERE HE RESIDES IN THE NETHERLANDS WAS FASCINATING TO ME.DUTCHYY CLEAN HAS A DIFFERANT MEANING TO ME NOW. THIS IS A MUST READ.MY WHOLE EXTENDE FAMILY IS ENJOYING IT.X I MUST CONFESS THAT I HAVE SADLY MISJUDGED JOHN ADAMS. HE HAD FAR MORE TO DO WITH ESTABLISHING OUR CONSTITUTION,DEALING WITH FRANCE IN FINANCING OUR REVOLUTION AND ENDING SLAVERY IN THE NORTH.

But, it also show him as a family man and a man in need of recognition. Not only does it give a year by year month by month account of John Adams' public life but it does a good job of showing you the context in which it occurred in the newly forming country.Besides Adams you also get a different look at Thomas Jefferson, who went from close friend to bitter rival back to friend, Benjamin Franklin in his later years, Alexander Hamilton and a most impressive account of his wife Abigail who was extraordinary on her own.The book paints Adams as one of the great men among the founding fathers, which he undoubtedly was. It does much to talk of his undying principles, which he believed were important for all if the new nation were to survive.If you are interested in the Revoultion or the founding fathers beyond the signing of the Declaration of Independence, read this book. This is the third book I have read dealing with the Revolution in recent months. I have to say this book is a must.

The American Revolution was a unique experiment conducted by a band of colorful, courageous, and dedicated individuals. It was John Adams who went to Europe as the representative of this new nation, United States, to borrow money from the French at first and the Dutch later to wean America away from its erstwhile master, Great Britain. He was not as flamboyant as Benjamin Franklin; he did not command armies and won battles as did George Washington; and he was not, as some might say, as refined as Thomas Jefferson. It was Adams who believed fervently in the idea of creating a country based on the basic premise of the equality of all men.

The book includes a fascinating account of Adams' rich relationship with his wife Abigail Adams and how much counsel he sought from her, of his deep friendship with Thomas Jefferson that persisted despite events that separated them for many years at a stretch, and much more. It was John Adams who held his own as the first American ambassador to Great Britain. This book traces the roots of John Adams from a planter's son to the second president of the United States. It is a long book, but don't let that stop you from venturing into a fascinating account of how one man's beliefs shaped a growing nation. It is an engrossing account of tumultuous times in the birth of a nation and the man who lead it through the growing pains. Primary among the founding fathers was John Adams, although it appears sometimes that history has passed him by.

And it was John Adams who, while being a deeply religious man, subscribed to the separation of church and state and limiting the powers of the president. (May 2009). But regardless, Adams left a unique stamp on the American Revolution. While Jefferson may have penned the words to the Declaration of Independence, those words were shaped and indeed lived in spirit the most by John Adams.

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