Showing posts with label Lincoln. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lincoln. Show all posts

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Lincoln: A Photobiography

The 1988 Newbery winner Lincoln: A Photobiography by Russell Freedman is an excellent and informative book about the life of our 16th president. What makes this book amazing is not only the pictures, but the writings of Lincoln which are provided and the small details of his life which perhaps are not as well known.


One amusing detail of his writing is from his home-made arithmetic book. In his own writing, Lincoln says:


"Abraham Lincoln

his hand and pen

he will be good but

god knows when" (p. 13)


Freedman provides many stories about Lincoln's childhood and family. The details of the day Lincoln was killed are very touching. The war was over and Lincoln and his wife, Mary, were trying to come to terms with the death of their second child. During a carriage ride early in the day, Lincoln told Mary, "We must both be more cheerful in the future. Between the war and the loss of our darling Willie, we have been very miserable." (p. 121)


I would recommend this book to anyone interested in one of our most honored presidents.


FlusiCat

Saturday, April 5, 2008

Lincoln: A Photobiography

Lincoln: A Photobiography by Russell Freedman

Lincoln is presented here as I have never seen him, in both text and photographs. The details about him surprised me; I knew, of course, that he was extremely tall and had had a limited formal education, but I had no idea his voice was high pitched and that he had so much trouble finding a good general during the Civil War and that he was shy. I also loved the fact that though he had a total of a year of schooling he was able to read and study himself for two years and pass his bar exam. The Civil War years were a revelation. Poor Lincoln went through general after general who was afraid to act. And Lincoln’s assassination was so unexpected, coming so close to the end of the war. I could really feel Lincoln’s anguish in trying to figure out how to lure back the rebel states without cruelty yet also closing the door forever on slavery.

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Lincoln: A Photobiography

Writing, the art of communicating thoughts to the mind through the eye, is the great invention of the world...enabling us to converse with the dead, the absent, and the unborn, at all distances of time and space. (from a lecture Abraham Lincoln gave to the Springfield Library Association, February 22, 1860)
This is my one of my favorite quotes from Lincoln:A Photobiography, by Russell Freedman.

I wish I had this book to read in jr. high school, or even in high school, instead of the remarkably mediocre and boring history on Lincoln and the Civil War that I got. Freedman's book is an unusually interesting one, filled with fantastic photographs (which you might expect from a book subtitled "a photobiography"), with many fascinating insights into Lincoln the person glimpsed behind Lincoln the American symbol.

I thought I knew a fair amount about Abraham Lincoln - I grew up in a small town in northern Illinois (the site of the first Lincoln-Douglas debate, actually), I was born on Lincoln's birthday (154 years later), and I've read a fair amount of history. But much to my surprise, I learned a great deal about both Lincoln and the Civil War from this children's book. I want to buy a copy of this book for myself and my children after I return this one to the library. I hope that it shows my kids that history - real history, not the regurgitated accounts we usually get - is really interesting.

Check out this description of the law offices of Lincoln & Herndon in Springfield, Illinois, in the 1850's:
Neither man was much for neatness, and people said that orange seeds sprouted in dusty office corners. Lincoln's favorite filing place for letters and papers was the lining of his high silk hat.
And this passage, with a memorable quote from William Herndon (Lincoln's law partner):
Lincoln liked to take Willie and Tad to the office when he worked on Sundays. Their wild behavior infuriated his partner. "The boys were absolutely unrestrained in their amusement," Herndon complained. "If they pulled down all the books from the shelves, bent the points of all the pens, overturned the spittoon, it never disturbed the serenity of their father's good nature. I have felt many and many a time that I wanted to wring the necks of those little brats and pitch them out the windows." (p. 41).
My only reservation about recommending this book for younger kids (say, less than 12 or 13) is that a couple of the photographs from the Civil War are rather disturbing - as indeed they should be, if we are to appreciate the cost in lives that was paid. But some children may not be ready to see photographs like this one, from Antietam.

Confederate Dead by a Fence on the Hagerstown Road,
September 1862,taken by Alexander Gardner.
LC-DIG-cwpb-01097 DLC in the American Memory
collection at the Library of Congress.

The only other part of the book that I really didn't like was the ending. Actually, Freedman did a wonderful job describing Lincoln's death and the funeral, and followed it all up with a sampler of lesser-known quotes (which I took the top one above from), I just didn't want the story to end like this.