• Home >
  • Buy >
  • Books >
  • 1776 by David Willis McCullough (2005, Hardcover)

corpok(5,183)99.7%
Like New
$10.00
+$4.00
Save 68%*
learco(8,071)99.8%
Very Good
$9.95
+$4.00
Save 68%*
powells_bookstore(36,544)99.4%
Good
$12.95
+$3.98
Save 59%*
*Learn more
1776 by David Willis McCullough (2005, Hardcover) 
1776 by David Willis McCullough (2005, Hardcover)

 
1776 by David Willis McCullough (2005, Hardcover)

Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Publication Date: 2005-05-24
Language: English
Format: Hardcover
ISBN-10: 0743226712
ISBN-13: 9780743226714
Product ID: EPID43110229
Description: David McCullough is known for his scholarly yet readable accounts of historical events and people's lives. Fans of his biography of John Adams will find the same narrative skill in 1776, his history of the first year of the America's war...
Portions of this page Copyright 1995 - 2009 Muze Inc. All rights reserved.
Preferences
Distance
Please enter valid zipcode.
Please select a valid popular city.
Please enter valid zipcode or select a valid popular city.
Within miles of ZIP
71 results|Group by condition
View as 
Sort by: 
Shipping to USA
Items per page:24 | 48 | 96 | 192
Page 1 of 3
PreviousPrevious1|2|3NextNext
Go to page
Synopsis
David McCullough is known for his scholarly yet readable accounts of historical events and people's lives. Fans of his biography of John Adams will find the same narrative skill in 1776, his history of the first year of the America's war for independence from Britain. General Washington is at the center of this history, but important too are the citizen-soldiers of the Continental Army, who seemed at first to be at a disadvantage compared to the well-trained and equipped British led by General Howe. Luck and pluck and good old American know-how helped even the odds, but the first year was a struggle. The difficult terrain and the weather affected all the troops, and there were victories and defeats on both sides. In his compellingly fresh accounts of important battles such as the Siege of Boston and the Battle for Brooklyn, McCullough takes familiar events of classroom history and makes them new. Includes maps, drawings, letters, and portraits in black-and-white and in color. A New York Times Notable Book of the Year for 2005.

Details
Publication Date:2005-05-24

Size
Length:386 pages
Height:9.3 in
Width:6.5 in
Thickness:1.2 in
Weight:27.2 oz

Publisher's Note
The two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning historian draws on personal correspondence and period diaries to present a landmark history of the American Revolution that ranges from the siege of Boston, to the American defeat at Brooklyn and retreat across New Jersey, to the stunning American victory at Trenton, capturing the people and events that transformed American history.

Industry Reviews
"Simply put, this is history writing at its best from one of its top practitioners."
Publishers Weekly (02/21/2005)

"[A] lucid and lively work that will engage both Revolutionary War bores and general readers who have avoided the subject since their school days....McCullough deftly sketches characters with a few quotations and details, humanizing a cast of thousands....A stirring and timely work, reminding us its soldiers rather than 'tavern patriots and windy politicians' who have always paid the price of American idealism and determined its successes."
New York Times Book Review - Tony Horwitz (05/22/2005)

"This is history at the ground level, sometimes even a few inches below. There is squishing mud for soldiers to trudge through, letters about absent loved ones and heartbreaking deaths, driving snow, and battlefields tipped with sun-gleaming bayonets like so many teeth grasping for prey. The prose is vibrant, and there is a telling insight into each character....But the book is essentially a portrait of the Continental Army's commander."
New Yorker - Joshua Micah Marshall (05/23/2005)

"1776 is vintage McCullough; colorful, eloquent and illuminating. In reconstructing that epic year in the life of the American Revolution, he has given us a fresh portrait of Washington himself."
Newsweek - Jon Meacham (05/23/2005)

"David McCullough writes with confidence, panache and authority, deftly mingling high strategy and low politics, with gripes and grumbles of redcoat and rebel alike. Although written with a natural American bias, his book strives (and it usually succeeds) to be fair to both sides. I recommend it unreservedly."
Literary Review - Nigel Jones (06/01/2005)

"[W]hereas many academic historians find it difficult to manage the elusive transmutation of raw archival material into compelling stories peopled by vivid, realistic personalities, McCullough has the imaginative capacity to reconstitute the inner lives of the long dead."
London Review of Books - Colin Kidd (11/17/2005)

"McCullough recounts the events of 1776 as if they had never been told before, with a freshness that brings home the drama and the sheer improbability of the events on which the U.S. is founded."
Time - Lev Grossman (12/26/2005)

See an error? Submit a change request
    Top Reviews
      A timely and gripping narrative...
    Review created: 11/07/06
    6 of 8 people found this review helpful.

    There are certain periods of history that never seem to become tired or dull regardless of how often they are written about. It seems that each new investigator finds some thing new to write about. The American Revolution is a case in point. A quick check of books in print will convince you.

    David McCullough's 1776 is a terrific investigation into the beginning of the American Revolution. Is it perfect? NO. It does have some missing pieces. But these minor defects are just that...minor. If you look at the complete work, I think you'll find that what 1776 lacks is made up for by McCulloughs ability to deliver the main facts on time and in a way the reader can grasp.

    As in John Adams, McCullough again finds the ability to make the main characters jump off the page. Washington, a figure that history has rightfully made larger than life is once again a human man, tortured with doubts and always mindful that disaster is just around the corner. I especially like the treatment that McCullough give King George III.

    As a reader, I always like reading a book that moves along. McCullough's narrative does that quite well. In fact, some of the flaws that other reviewers have rightfully pointed out seem to spring from this style of writing.

    Well researched and paced for the non-historian, 1776 is a winner. When all is said and done, you'll find that 1776 is worth the time you'll spend reading it.


    Review ID: 10000000002289011
    Was this review helpful?
     
    Report this review
      Well researched and informative.
    Review created: 04/07/06
    by:
    6 of 8 people found this review helpful.

    McCullough did a superb job of explaning the American Revolution for the ordinary reader. Well researched and well written. recommended for book clubs.


    Review ID: 10000000000849280
    Was this review helpful?
     
    Report this review
     

    About eBay | Announcements | Security Center | Resolution Center | eBay Toolbar | Policies | Government Relations | Site Map | Help
    Copyright © 1995-2009 eBay Inc. All Rights Reserved. Designated trademarks and brands are the property of their respective owners. Use of this Web site constitutes acceptance of the eBay User Agreement and Privacy Policy.
    eBay official time

    Error
    We're sorry, but there's been an error.
    Please try again.