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Being Thomas Jefferson : An Intimate History
Being Thomas Jefferson : An Intimate History
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Author(s): Burstein, Andrew
ISBN No.: 9781639737680
Pages: 480
Year: 202601
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 46.20
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

"Close-up portrait by a noted Jefferson scholar aimed at ''advancing historical knowledge without prescriptive politics.'' . Burstein''s psychological insights are impressively detailed and grounded in valuable historical context . A nuanced, warts-and-all examination of a complicated Founding Father." -- Kirkus "Noted Jefferson scholar Andrew Burstein has produced an elegantly written exploration of our third president''s inner life. Being Thomas Jefferson is a thought-provoking and timely addition to the literature on Jefferson." -- Annette Gordon-Reed, winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award for THE HEMINGSES OF MONTICELLO: AN AMERICAN FAMILY "Most biographies of Thomas Jefferson are focused on his intellect. Andrew Burstein lays open his heart.


He has answered a question that has always puzzled me: why was Jefferson so adroit at playing hide-and-seek inside himself." --Joseph J. Ellis, author AMERICAN SPHINX: THE CHARACTER OF THOMAS JEFFERSON "Andrew Burstein has written what promises to become the most acclaimed contemporary biography of Thomas Jefferson - appropriately for the 200th year after his death and the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. Burstein neither tries to promote or dethrone but succeeds in creating a revealing portrait of a complex individual, who had a great capacity for friendship and grudges, who sought privacy but also celebrity, who was pessimistic about human nature but optimistic about the possibilities for the future. Skillfully dissecting his use of language, the biography reminds us of why it is important to engage with a man who more than any other is part of the DNA of the United States." -- Andrew O''Shaughnessy, author of THE ILLIMITABLE FREEDOM OF THE HUMAN MIND and THE MEN WHO LOST AMERICA "Drawing on a lifetime of research on Thomas Jefferson, historian Andrew Burstein achieves what few scholars have thought possible: to penetrate Jefferson''s public façade so as to plumb his innermost depths. Written with immense learning, grace, and sensitivity, Burstein offers a deep psychological portrait that allows readers to imagine the third president in wholly new ways." -- Rosemarie Zagarri, author of REVOLUTIONARY BACKLASH: WOMEN AND POLITICS IN THE EARLY AMERICAN REPUBLIC "In this provocative ''psychological reckoning,'' Andrew Burstein illuminates both the inner life of Jefferson, and also the challenges and rewards of the biographer''s craft.


With a focus on who Jefferson hated as well as who he loved, Burstein foregrounds Jefferson''s uncanny ability to rationalize his own behavior, and his unwillingness to judge himself. Burstein deftly interweaves the private and the public and thus vividly brings early American politics to life." -- Elizabeth R. Varon, author of LONGSTREET: THE CONFEDERATE GENERAL WHO DEFIED THE SOUTH "An exciting, sensitive, & perceptive probe into the hidden Jefferson. It is a touchingly personal & succinct book that compliments & culminates Burstein''s life-long contribution to understanding Jefferson. Those new to Jefferson literature will find it comprehensive & engaging. Scholars will appreciate its insights & speculations about its mysterious subject." -- Fred Kaplan, author of JOHN QUINCY ADAMS: AMERICAN VISIONARY and HIS MASTERLY PEN: A BIOGRAPHY OF JEFFERSON THE WRITER "Fresh and persuasive, Being Thomas Jefferson helps reinterpret this immensely complex man for the modern reader.


Based on enormous and wide-ranging research, Andrew Burstein intervenes at critical moments in Thomas Jefferson''s long life to offer penetrating analytical insights." -- John B. Boles, author of JEFFERSON: ARCHITECT OF AMERICAN LIBERTY "I thought I knew Thomas Jefferson. I''ve read the hagiographies, the political philosophers, the learned biographies, the psychologists, the muckrakers. I''m familiar with the facts and speculations about his secret life with Sally Hemings. I''ve studied the marble statue on the Tidal Basin and the arguments for taking that statue down. It turns out I didn''t know Jefferson half so well as I thought. This "intimate history" is neither gossip nor psychoanalysis.


It''s not hero worship or iconoclasm. Burstein has an encyclopedic knowledge of Jefferson''s world-which vegetables came to table in Virginia, which philosophers could be found in Philadelphia bookstores, and what pornography one might access in Paris. He also has that genius quality of telling us what we could have known all along, if only we were sensible enough to see what was in plain sight. It turns out that Thomas Jefferson, like you and me, was a human being." -- Joseph Kelly, author of MAROONED and THE BIGGEST LIE "There is no finer scholar of the inner life of Thomas Jefferson than Andrew Burstein. In this brilliant, provocative, new book Burstein picks up where Fawn Brodie left off fifty years ago and shows us a Jefferson who was torn between his powerful desire to achieve fame and leave his mark on history, and the impulse to retreat from public life. The result is a beautifully written study that shows Jefferson in a new light, calling us to reconsider what we thought we knew about the Sage of Monticello." -- Francis D.


Cogliano, author of A REVOLUTIONARY FRIENDSHIP: WASHINGTON, JEFFERSON AND THE AMERICAN REPUBLIC "Thomas Jefferson is a puzzle. His ideas and politics are well known, but much about his inner life-what he really thought, why he thought it, and what drove him-has remained hidden. Andrew Burstein, who perhaps knows Jefferson>"Andrew Burstein has written what promises to become the most acclaimed contemporary biography of Thomas Jefferson - appropriately for the 200th year after his death and the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. Burstein neither tries to promote or dethrone but succeeds in creating a revealing portrait of a complex individual, who had a great capacity for friendship and grudges, who sought privacy but also celebrity, who was pessimistic about human nature but optimistic about the possibilities for the future. Skillfully dissecting his use of language, the biography reminds us of why it is important to engage with a man who more than any other is part of the DNA of the United States." -- Andrew O''Shaughnessy, author of THE ILLIMITABLE FREEDOM OF THE HUMAN MIND and THE MEN WHO LOST AMERICA "Drawing on a lifetime of research on Thomas Jefferson, historian Andrew Burstein achieves what few scholars have thought possible: to penetrate Jefferson''s public façade so as to plumb his innermost depths. Written with immense learning, grace, and sensitivity, Burstein offers a deep psychological portrait that allows readers to imagine the third president in wholly new ways." -- Rosemarie Zagarri, author of REVOLUTIONARY BACKLASH: WOMEN AND POLITICS IN THE EARLY AMERICAN REPUBLIC "In this provocative ''psychological reckoning,'' Andrew Burstein illuminates both the inner life of Jefferson, and also the challenges and rewards of the biographer''s craft.


With a focus on who Jefferson hated as well as who he loved, Burstein foregrounds Jefferson''s uncanny ability to rationalize his own behavior, and his unwillingness to judge himself. Burstein deftly interweaves the private and the public and thus vividly brings early American politics to life." -- Elizabeth R. Varon, author of LONGSTREET: THE CONFEDERATE GENERAL WHO DEFIED THE SOUTH "An exciting, sensitive, & perceptive probe into the hidden Jefferson. It is a touchingly personal & succinct book that compliments & culminates Burstein''s life-long contribution to understanding Jefferson. Those new to Jefferson literature will find it comprehensive & engaging. Scholars will appreciate its insights & speculations about its mysterious subject." -- Fred Kaplan, author of JOHN QUINCY ADAMS: AMERICAN VISIONARY and HIS MASTERLY PEN: A BIOGRAPHY OF JEFFERSON THE WRITER "Fresh and persuasive, Being Thomas Jefferson helps reinterpret this immensely complex man for the modern reader.


Based on enormous and wide-ranging research, Andrew Burstein intervenes at critical moments in Thomas Jefferson''s long life to offer penetrating analytical insights." -- John B. Boles, author of JEFFERSON: ARCHITECT OF AMERICAN LIBERTY "I thought I knew Thomas Jefferson. I''ve read the hagiographies, the political philosophers, the learned biographies, the psychologists, the muckrakers. I''m familiar with the facts and speculations about his secret life with Sally Hemings. I''ve studied the marble statue on the Tidal Basin and the arguments for taking that statue down. It turns out I didn''t know Jefferson half so well as I thought. This "intimate history" is neither gossip nor psychoanalysis.


It''s not hero worship or iconoclasm. Burstein has an encyclopedic knowledge of Jefferson''s world-which vegetables came to table in Virginia, which philosophers could be found in Philadelphia bookstores, and what pornography one might access in Paris. He also has that genius quality of telling us what we could have known all along, if only we were sensible enough to see what was in plain sight. It turns out that Thomas Jefferson, like you and me, was a human being." -- Joseph Kelly, author of MAROONED and THE BIGGEST LIE "There is no finer scholar of the inner life of Thomas Jefferson than Andrew Burstein. In this brilliant, provocative, new book Burstein picks up where Fawn Brodie>"Andrew Burstein has written what promises to become the most acclaimed contemporary biography of Thomas Jefferson - appropriately for the 200th year after his death and the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. Burstein neither tries to pro.


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