"David S. Brown has crafted a fascinating narrative web, one that expertly interweaves the well-known with the little-remembered. The book abounds in compelling portraits of the great and not-so-great. A Hell of a Storm is a hell of a book, insightfully revealing how America's best minds could not avert America's greatest calamity." --John Matteson, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Eden's Outcasts and A Worse Place Than Hell
"No one who encounters David Brown's new re-telling of the infamous 'Nebraska Bill' will be in any doubt that it was the most toxic piece of legislation ever to pass a U.S. Congress. With a sharply ironic pen, Brown walks us through the terrible unfolding of the year 1854 and the deadly ways it pointed the nation toward civil war. A tour de force!" --Allen C. Guelzo, Princeton University, author of Gettysburg: The Last Invasion
"David S. Brown plies his historian's conscience along the ragged seams of American politics and violence, people and events, reminding us that our choices make and unmake our history. His skillful chronicle of the decline of compromise culture is adventuresome, ominous, and, in our convulsive days, necessary." --John Summers, historian and author of Every Fury on Earth
"Lively . . . A series of vibrantly narrated vignettes demonstrate the Act's radicalizing effect . . . Readers will be entranced by this sharply drawn study of sectarian feeling." --Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Engaging . . . intriguing and persuasive . . . Brown's ultimate conclusions are apt, compelling, and memorably expressed. . . . A lively, incisive examination of the social and political background of a tumultuous era." --Kirkus
"Noteworthy . . . readers will come away better informed about antebellum history and how it mirrors current events." --Booklist
"Insightful . . . historian David S. Brown makes a convincing case for the importance of 1854 . . . a compelling story that explains how Americans abandoned compromise and turned to war to resolve their differences." --Wall Street Journal