
author of "How the Scots Invented the Modern World"
Michael Knox Beran gives us a Thomas Jefferson we have not met before. This is not the intrepid Founding Father and sage from Monticello, or the slave-owning ravisher of Sally Hemings. This is Jefferson in flesh and blood, in mind and soul, a man haunted by the sights, smells, ideas, obsessions, of his own age. Michael Beran has given us a book of brilliance and imagination.
Beran has written a fascinating account of the glories, complexities, and discrepancies of the philosophic thinking of the most imaginative and scholarly of our presidents. He shows us how Jefferson used his knowledge of the spiritual rites of ancient civilizations to help direct his inner genius or "demon" to convert .,."lust into love, passion into noble architecture, bloody revolution into ordered liberty, and so on." But he also shows us the occasional bad moments when the sage of Monticello became the victim of the manifold contradictions of his protean nature.