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1 oeuvres 31 utilisateurs 1 Critiques

Œuvres de James R. Boylston

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Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Boylston, James R.
Nom légal
Boylston, James Reed
Date de naissance
1954-04-09
Sexe
male
Nationalité
USA
Lieux de résidence
Orlando, Florida, USA
Courte biographie
Jim Boylston has had a lifelong interest in David Crockett and the Alamo and has contributed important articles to The Alamo Journal and The Crockett Chronicle.
He is the founder and moderator of the Alamo Studies Forum (www.alamostudies.com), a web based discussion group dedicated to the serious study of the Alamo and the Texas Revolution. A songwriter and audio engineer, Jim has had blues songs covered by Lucky Peterson, Kenny Neal, Melvin Taylor, and many others. He lives in Orlando, Florida.

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THE MOST IMPORTANT CROCKETT BOOK IN FIFTY YEARS!

When this book arrived, I was shocked at the size. I'm not sure how I pictured it, but I wasn't expecting a deluxe hardcover the size of a big city phonebook!

Then I read it, and had still another revelation. You see, folks, this is no ordinary history book. It's a landmark in Crockett literature. Bottom line? This is the most important Crockett book to appear in over fifty years. I know, because aside from a handful of juvenile biographies and storybooks, I've read them all.

Why is it so important? First, it provides a wealth of new scholarship regarding an vital and long overlooked period of Crockett's life. And second, it introduces us to the real David Crockett in a way never before possible - in his own words.

"Wait!" you say. "Didn't Crockett write an autobiography?" Yes he did, sort of. And it's a fine read. But he had help. It's not pure Crockett, and it's not always as factual as historians would like.

That autobiography was published in 1834, and for the next 122 years, biographers just rehashed the same information. James Atkins Shackford changed all that in 1956, with David Crockett: The Man and the Legend, opening up acres of new territory in Crockett's life. Most important of these was Crockett's political career. But while Shackford's work on that period was groundbreaking, it left me wanting more. I kept expecting someone to dig into the original sources Shackford only alluded to and give us the whole story.

That's what James Boylston and Allen Wiener have done, and the result is far more than I'd hoped for. The back half of the book delivers all the poop from those original sources - letters, circulars, newspaper articles, and the congressional record. Much of this stuff is in Crockett's own unvarnished words (complete with lack of punctuation), taking us closer to the real man than we've ever been.

The first half of the book puts that information in context, taking us step-by-step through Crockett's career in Congress. Boylston and Wiener introduce us to all the major players, both friend and foe, and give us a firm grounding in the issues of the day, allowing us to understand what Crockett was up against, and appreciate what his actions revealed about his character.

This is not the Davy we saw on the Disney show. This is the real guy, and we get to know him warts and all. The Crockett that emerges is a different kind of hero, the one hinted at in the book's subtitle. Whatever troubles came his way (and they were many), Crockett never lost sight of his ideals, and truly was "the Poor Man's Friend".
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
EvanLewis | Mar 23, 2010 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
1
Membres
31
Popularité
#440,253
Évaluation
5.0
Critiques
1
ISBN
1